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James HANRATTY
LORD
JUSTICE MANTELL
MR JUSTICE LEVESON
Between :
JAMES HANRATTY deceased,
Lord Chief Justice: This is the
judgment of the Court
INTRODUCTION
2. On 14 October 1961, following an
extensive police investigation, James Hanratty was
charged with capital murder. Committal proceedings took
place between 22 November and 5 December 1961. He was
indicted only for capital murder; there was no charge in
relation to Valerie Storie in accordance with the then
practice.
3. The trial commenced before Gorman
J and a jury on 22 January 1962. 83 witnesses were
called as part of the prosecution case, James Hanratty
and 14 others were called on behalf of the defence and 3
were called in rebuttal (of an alibi disclosed for the
first time when Mr Michael Sherrard, for the defence,
opened his case). The trial having lasted what was then
a record 21 days, on 17 February, James Hanratty was
convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.
4. An appeal was mounted before the
Court of Criminal Appeal; it was heard on 13 March 1962
by Lord Parker CJ, Ashworth and Fenton Atkinson JJ. The
grounds of appeal which were pursued were that the
verdict of the jury was unreasonable or could not be
supported by the evidence; the learned judge failed
properly or fully to put the defence to the jury; and
the learned judge misdirected the jury as to the
evidence and/or failed adequately or properly to sum up
on the issues raised upon the evidence adduced by the
prosecution. There was no application to adduce further
evidence.
5. As to the first ground, giving the
judgment of the court, Lord Parker CJ observed that
“there was abundant evidence which, if accepted by the
jury, would support the verdict”. In relation to the
other points, the Lord Chief Justice went on:
“Mr Sherrard … referred to a number
of points which he says the Judge failed to make and
certain evidence to which he failed to refer. This was a
case lasting 21 days … and it would indeed be remarkable
if every item of the evidence were referred to and in
which the Judge referred to every point or comment made
by Counsel on either side. Indeed, we would emphasise
that it is no part of the Judge’s duty to refer to all
the evidence or to mention all the points taken and
comments made. His duty is to present the case on each
side fairly and impartially to the jury concentrating of
course on the vital issues in the case.”
In dismissing each of the grounds
advanced, he went on to observe:
“[T]he summing up was clear, it was
impartial, it was not only fair but favourable to the
prisoner and contained no misdirections of law and no
misdirections in fact on any of the important issues in
the case. The Court is of the opinion that this was a
clear case.”
6. On 4 April 1962, just over 7 weeks
after his conviction and 7½ months after the killing,
James Hanratty was executed. It is worth observing that
he was one of the last to suffer that penalty in this
country. On 9 November 1965, by the Murder (Abolition of
Death Penalty) Act 1965, capital punishment was
abrogated, initially until 31 July 1970, but thereafter,
by affirmative resolution of both Houses, permanently.
It now offends Article 1 of the Sixth Protocol of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms.
7. In the years which have followed,
there has been a vigorous campaign to establish that the
conviction constituted a miscarriage of justice. In July
1963, Fenner Brockway submitted a dossier to the Home
Office; on 2 August 1963, during an early day motion in
Parliament, the Home Secretary of the day rejected calls
for an enquiry into the conviction. In 1967, following a
Panorama television programme, the then Home Secretary
appointed a senior police officer to undertake an
inquiry into the alibi evidence. He reported that the
conviction was safe. On 1 November 1967, the Home
Secretary made a Commons statement to that effect. There
were further references to the case in the Houses of
Parliament in 1969, 1971 (when a new inquiry was
refused) and 1972.
8. In 1974, the then Home Secretary,
the Rt Hon Roy Jenkins, appointed Lewis Hawser QC to
conduct an inquiry. Messrs Bindmans (who continue to act
for the Hanratty family) forwarded submissions. On
10 April 1975, Mr Hawser concluded that the case against
James Hanratty was ‘overwhelming’.
9. On 13 July 1994, further
submissions were made to the Criminal Cases Unit of the
Home Office. On 1 April 1997, responsibility for
considering alleged miscarriages of justice passed to
the Criminal Cases Review Commission (“the Commission”)
who took over responsibility for investigating the
allegations as to James Hanratty’s conviction. Having
conducted further enquiries (including obtaining DNA
evidence), on 26 March 1999, the Commission referred the
conviction to this Court pursuant to section 13 of the
Criminal Appeal Act 1995. The Commission stated, in
accordance with the statutory provisions, that there was
a real possibility that the conviction would not be
upheld.
10. The referral has been followed by
Perfected Grounds of Appeal which rely on 17 grounds.
These grounds overlap. Eleven are based on failures by
the prosecution to disclose material to the defence, one
concerns the conduct of the identification parade at
which Valerie Storie identified James Hanratty, one
relates to the interviews (and is supported by E.S.D.A.
testing of interview notes) and four deal with
directions given during of the course of the summing up
(all but one based on stricter standards introduced
since 1962).
11. On 17 October 2000, in the light
of the DNA evidence then available, this Court ordered
that the body of James Hanratty be exhumed for the
purposes of obtaining specimens of his DNA. Extensive
further scientific evidence has since been assembled.
12. In addition to raising factual
issues the appeal has required us to consider issues of
law which are of general importance as to the role of
this Court in relation to fresh evidence relied on by
the prosecution as well as the appellant. The appeal
also raises the vexed question of how the changes in
standards over the years affects appeals against
convictions following trials which took place prior to
those changes. We will deal with these issues after we
have set out the facts
THE FACTS
13. It was about 5.30pm on Tuesday 22
August 1961 that Michael Gregsten, aged 36, and Valerie
Storie, aged 23 (who were both Civil Servants employed
at the Road Research Laboratory at Langley,
Buckinghamshire) met after work. Using a borrowed grey
Morris Minor car, 847 BHN, they went to the Old Station
Inn, Taplow, for a drink. They left the Inn at about
8.45pm and drove to a nearby cornfield at Dorney Reach.
About 30-45 minutes later, as it was getting dark, a man
approached the vehicle and tapped on the driver’s
window. Valerie Storie could see from his shoulders to
his waist: he was wearing “a dark suit and a white shirt
and a tie - a very smart looking suit”. Michael.
Gregsten dropped the window halfway down whereupon a gun
was thrust through the window and the man said: “This is
a hold up. I am a desperate man. I have been on the run
for four months.”
14. After taking the ignition key
from Michael Gregsten, the man, whose face was partially
covered with a handkerchief, got into the back of the
car. He remained with the couple for a period of about
six hours. Initially, he told them that ‘You will be all
right if you do as I tell you’. They remained in the
field until about 11.30pm. Thereafter, the car went on a
rather roundabout journey through the Northwest outer
suburbs (Slough, Kingsbury, St Albans) and on to the A6
where the murder took place.
15. A considerable amount of
conversation took place during the following six hours.
In the light of the emphasis placed by both sides on the
extent to which what was said did or did not fit with
James Hanratty, it is worth summarising the evidence
which Valerie Storie gave about what he said. This
included that:
i) He had not had the gun very long:
“This is like a cowboy’s gun: I feel rather like a
cowboy”. … “It is a .38”.
ii) He had never shot anyone.
iii) He was very hungry, he had not
eaten for two days and had been sleeping out the last
two nights (which Valerie Storie thought was
contradicted by his appearance); he had been in the
Oxford area for the last few days. On any showing, these
facts did not fit with James Hanratty’s proved
movements.
iv) He had never had a chance in
life; when he was a child he had been locked in the
cellar for days on end and only had bread and water to
drink. There was no evidence that this applied to James
Hanratty.
v) He had been to remand homes and
Borstal: he had done C.T. (i.e. Corrective Training) and
the next thing he would get would be P.D. (i.e.
Preventive Detention). He said: “I have done the lot”
and that he had “done housebreaking”. Miss Storie
believed he said he had done five years for
housebreaking. The Crown argued that the phrase ‘I have
done the lot’ was slang for the removal of all remission
of sentence resulting in a requirement to serve a full
custodial term. James Hanratty was one of only five
prisoners at that time to have ‘done the lot’ in this
sense. The defence did not accept that the phrase bore
that meaning. Further, on any showing, James Hanratty
was not then eligible for a sentence of Preventive
Detention.
vi) He had been on the run for four
months which he later changed to 18 months and that
“every policeman in England” was looking for him.
vii) He did not like smoking and did
not usually smoke.
viii) Having asked about the
positioning of the gears when Michael Gregsten was
driving, Valerie Storie concluded that he did not seem
to have much knowledge of the Morris Minor car. Further,
he appeared to be very nervous as a passenger and said
things such as ‘Oh be careful of the lights’. On the
other hand, when asked by the couple whether he drove
cars he said ‘Oh yes I can drive all sorts of cars’.
16. Having listened to the man over a
very considerable period of time, Valerie Storie felt
able to describe his speech and voice. She did so in
these terms:
“He had got a London type voice. He
could not say ‘things’ and ‘think’. He said ‘Fings’ and
‘Fink’. His voice was very quiet very soft spoken, not a
deep voice. I should say from his voice he was ‘twenty-ish’”.
It was not disputed that, in common
with many Londoners, James Hanratty pronounced “th” as
“f”.
17. During the course of the
incident, the man took their watches and some money
(although Valerie Storie was able to hide some of her
money about her clothing); he subsequently returned both
watches to her. At one stage, the man said that he would
put Michael Gregsten in the boot and they got out of the
car; in the event, he was not put in the boot.
Throughout this time, Valerie Storie could not see the
man’s face as he had a handkerchief covering the lower
part.
18. Some time after 11pm, on the
instructions of the man, they drove off and went through
Slough. The man said that he knew of a café where they
could get some food. In Slough, Valerie Storie noticed
the time was 11.45pm. Later, they stopped at a garage
for petrol and obtained 2 gallons which cost 9.9d. It
was paid for with a ten-shilling note. Valerie Storie
said that the garage at which they had stopped was near
London Airport.
19. They drove on and the man gave
directions. At one point in the Harrow area the man
said, “Be careful: round the corner there is some
roadworks.” Although there was no sign to give any
warning, round the corner there were in fact some
roadworks; he then, apparently hastily, added, “I do not
know this area”. In any event, it was Valerie Storie’s
evidence that he did seem to know the area and the
prosecution relied on the fact that James Hanratty’s
family then lived at Kingsbury which is in the vicinity.
20. There came a time when the man
began to say that he was feeling tired and “wanted a
kip”. He said this several times. They turned off the
main road a couple of times, on his directions, the man
saying he wanted to do so to have “a kip”. Finally,
again on his directions, they drove into the lay-by or
slip road on the A6 a few miles south of Bedford. All
the lights were turned out. The man repeated that he
wanted “to kip” and said that he must tie them up. The
use of the word “kip” and the phrase “to kip” became
significant at the trial. According to the interviewing
police officers (Detective Superintendent Acott and
Detective Sergeant Kenneth Oxford), but denied by James
Hanratty, it was used three times during the course of
contemporaneously recorded interviews.
21. The man tied up Valerie Storie’s
arms. He said to Michael Gregsten, “I have got to find
something to tie you up with”. When it was suggested
that he should use his tie, the man said, “No, I need
that”. Michael Gregsten was made to open the boot of the
car and the man found some cord which, together with
Michael Gregsten’s tie, he used to tie Valerie Storie’s
hands. Gregsten returned to the driver’s seat and the
gunman returned to the backseat.
22. In the front of the car was a
duffel bag. He said to Michael Gregsten, “Give me that
bag up”. Michael Gregsten picked up the bag with both
hands, turned towards the interior of the car and as the
bag was just about to go over the back of the seat, the
man fired two shots in quick succession at his head.
Michael Gregsten died instantly. Valerie Storie screamed
and said: “You shot him you bastard. Why did you do
that?” His reply was, “He frightened me. He turned too
quick. I got frightened.” Miss Storie tried to persuade
him to get Michael Gregsten to a doctor and on two
occasions he said: “Be quiet will you. I am finking.”
The pronunciation of that word was relied upon by the
prosecution. That, together with the direction to the
jury which followed is the subject of argument on this
appeal (Grounds 6 and 15).
23. Carrying on with the events of
the night, the man asked Valerie Storie to kiss him. She
refused. At this time they were facing each other and
while in that position a car passed by lighting up the
man’s face. Miss Storie’s evidence was that this was the
first (and only) opportunity of “seeing what he looked
like” and that “this was the only real proper glimpse of
him that I had”. Her evidence to the jury went on, “He
had very large pale blue staring icy eyes.” There was
then this exchange:
Mr Justice Gorman: “Very large pale
blue staring icy eyes?”
Miss Storie: “Staring icy eyes. He
seemed to have got a pale face as I should imagine
anyone would have having just shot someone. He had got
brown hair combed back, no parting. The light was only
on his face for a few seconds as the vehicle went past
and then we were in complete darkness again.”
She stated that she did not have good
eyesight but was wearing her glasses when this happened.
She added to the description that he was a man in his
early 20s, clean-shaven, about her height (5 ft. 3½
ins.) or a little taller, very quiet and soft-spoken,
voice not deep.
24. Valerie Storie’s evidence to the
jury was that by threatening her with the gun the man
made her get into the back seat. He was wearing black
gloves. He seemed to have difficulty in getting them off
and made her pull one of them off. She could feel that
they were of a very thin nylon type texture. He then
raped her. After that, when she tried to persuade him to
go, he again said: “Be quiet will you: I am finking”.
25. On the man’s instructions,
Michael Gregsten was removed from the car by Valerie
Storie who, with some assistance from the man, dragged
him out to the lay-by. The man asked her to start the
car and show him where the gears were; this she did and
she also showed him how the lights worked. She left the
car running. It stopped; she re-started it and again
showed him how the gears worked. He got in the car and
she went over and sat down on the ground beside Michael
Gregsten. The man then got out and went over to her. He
threatened to hit her and she gave him a pound and asked
him to go. He started to walk away and when about 6-10
feet away suddenly turned round and started to shoot.
Miss Storie felt one bullet hit her; when the second
bullet hit her she fell over and was hit by two or three
more bullets while lying on the ground. She heard a
clicking sound as if he was re-loading the gun, and then
he fired another 3 shots which she thought did not hit
her. (She was in fact hit by 5 bullets and, as we have
recorded, was paralysed from the waist down in
consequence.) He came over and touched her; she
pretended to be dead. He then drove off in the direction
of Luton. With her right hand she gathered up some
stones and told the jury that she tried to make the
words “blue eyes” and “brown hair”.
26. Valerie Storie said that Michael
Gregsten was shot at about 2.00-2.15am and that the man
left about 3.00am. After he had shot Michael Gregsten
the gunman asked Valerie Storie again what her name was
and she asked “What shall I call you?”. He thought and
said, “Well, you can call me Jim.” (Valerie Storie said,
on at least one occasion before trial, that she thought
that Jim was not his real name though in fact apparently
it was the name by which James Hanratty was known.)
27. At about 6.30am Valerie Storie
was found by John Kerr an Oxford undergraduate involved
in a road census. According to his evidence, she told
him:
“We were held up by a man with a gun
who shot us. He said it was a .38. We picked him up
about 9 or 9.30 at Slough … He is about my own height.
He has large staring eyes. He has light fairish hair”.
John Kerr said that he made a note of
Valerie Storie’s name and address, the description and
the number of the car which he gave to the police; the
note was not found. As to the discrepancies, Valerie
Storie denied saying ‘light fairish hair’; she also
denied ever saying that they had picked him up because
they had not done so. These matters were fully
investigated at the trial.
28. Valerie Storie was taken to
hospital. While there, items of her clothing which
included two slips and a pair of knickers were taken
from her and submitted for scientific examination. Semen
stains on the knickers were later found to have been
derived from a person who was a group O secretor.
29. While at the hospital, Valerie
Storie was seen by police officers. The first two
officers to attend at her bedside were Detective
Sergeant Rees and Woman Police Constable Rutland. Notes
of what she then said had happened to her were made.
These notes were disclosed after the trial and are the
subject of grounds of appeal (Grounds 1 and 2). The same
is true of the fact that, in addition to making her
witness statements, she was interviewed at length (at
which she made certain remarks to which the appellant
attaches significance) and was shown photographs
(although it is not suggested that she was ever shown a
photograph of James Hanratty) (Ground 3).
30. Returning to the chronology of
events, three or four hours after the killing at about
7am on Wednesday 23 August, a Morris Minor was seen
being driven along Eastern Avenue in the direction of
Gants Hill. As a result of the way it was being driven,
John Skillett who was driving his car to work, with his
friend Edward Blackhall in the front passenger seat,
decided to catch up with the car. He pulled up alongside
the Morris Minor when they were almost stationary at a
roundabout, leading to Gants Hill station, to give its
driver a piece of his mind. Mr Skillett said that he had
a ‘very good view’ of the driver’s face’. The vehicles
were abreast for about a few seconds. Mr Blackhall, the
passenger, also expressed himself as “certain” that he
would know the man again; he identified the car involved
in the incident as the grey Morris Minor 847 BHN from
three strips of red tape on the rear bumper and a torn
green label on the rear windscreen. (The red tape was
quite common on Morris Minors of that period and the
appellant suggests that the torn green label might have
been seen at the police station.)
31. A little later that same morning,
James Trower was driving his car to work along Redbridge
Lane East. He was about to pick up a friend of his,
Paddy Hogan. He parked his car and heard a car being
driven badly. The car, a light grey Morris Minor car
passed him and turned into Avondale Crescent where it
stopped. Mr Trower stated that he had a full-face view
of the driver (for about three seconds) who was wearing
a dark jacket and a white shirt. As will become apparent
when detailing the defence evidence, Mr Hogan gave
evidence to the effect that Mr Trower only arrived at
his house some twenty minutes or so after Mr Hogan had
himself noticed a Morris Minor turn into Avondale
Crescent and come to a halt. Again, this dispute was
fully investigated at the trial.
32. As to the presence of the motor
car in Avondale Crescent, this evidence broadly fitted
with that of Doris Athoe. She lived at 6 Avondale
Crescent and recollected the interest shown by the
police in what was the Morris Minor 847 BHN later on 23
August. She said that she had seen it “round about 7
o’clock in the morning” and that it remained there on
the occasions (“at least twice”) that she had passed up
and down the Crescent. Her deposition was read and thus
the time at which the car was left was not in issue: the
availability of new material on sightings of what may
have been the Morris Minor later that day provides a
further ground of appeal (Ground 7).
33. On Thursday
24 August 1961, (the day after the killing), shortly
before 9pm, the murder weapon, a .38 Enfield revolver,
was found; it was wrapped in a stained handkerchief. The
gun was fully loaded and was with five boxes of
ammunition and some loose ammunition. These items were
all found by a cleaner, Edwin Cooke, underneath the back
seat of a 36A bus at the garage at Rye Lane, near New
Cross. (The back seat of the bus had been checked on the
night of Wednesday 23 August 1961 and the gun and
ammunition had not been there at that time.) The
prosecution suggested that the gun had been deposited on
the morning of 24 August. Complaint is now made that
they did not call or disclose the identity of the bus
conductress, Pamela Patt (Ground 11).
34. There are
two aspects of the place in which the weapon was found.
The first emerges from the evidence of Charles France
(known as “Dixie”). James Hanratty was a friend who
regularly visited Mr France’s home in Boundary Road,
London NW8 where he lived with his wife and children,
one being a daughter Carol then aged 16. On an occasion
prior to the 21 August 1961, James Hanratty was
discussing his activities as a thief with Mr France and
referred to the space under the back seat of a bus as a
receptacle. James Hanratty’s own account, given in
evidence at the trial was that he told Charles France
that if he got on a bus with stuff in his pocket he
would sort it out upstairs on the bus and put the good
stuff in his pocket and put the rubbish under the back
seat. It is clear that James Hanratty knew about the
space under the back seat and the fact that it was a
good hiding place for anything he might want to dispose
of. The second feature noted during the trial was the
route of the 36A bus: it passes along Sussex Gardens,
near the bottom of Sutherland Avenue, Maida Vale, on
which is to be found the Vienna Hotel.
35. Although not
revealed during the trial, the police put out an appeal
to hotel staff generally requesting information about
anyone behaving strangely. One such report concerned a
man, Peter Louis Alphon, staying at the Alexandra Court
Hotel in London. It is not suggested that there was any
evidence implicating Peter Alphon in any way but he was
interviewed and told the police that he spent the night
of the murder at the Vienna Hotel also in London. Thus,
and for that reason, this hotel came to be visited.
36. On 11
September 1961 (some twenty days after the killing), two
cartridge cases were found in room 24 at the Vienna
Hotel, Sutherland Avenue, Maida Vale; it was later
established scientifically that they had been fired from
the murder weapon. The circumstances in which they came
to be found and the evidence given by four witnesses
associated with the hotel (together with other material
relating to them which was not disclosed) are the
subject of a number of criticisms (Grounds 8-10). It is
sufficient for present purposes to identify the evidence
(agreed by the defence). This is that James Hanratty had
spent the night of 21/22 August 1961 in room 24 at the
Vienna Hotel in the bed adjacent to the chair under and
on which they were found (which was in an alcove). He
had used the name of “J Ryan” of 72 Wood Lane, Kingsbury
(which, according to the evidence at the trial, was an
address at which he had never lived although he had also
used it when booking a hotel in Ireland). Further, it is
also important to underline that the spent cartridges
were discovered before James Hanratty had featured in
the investigation: it was their presence in room 24 that
caused the police to seek to identify the “J Ryan”. He
had been one of only two people who had spent a night in
that room (which had four beds) in the period between
the week of the murder and the recovery of the
cartridges.
37. Given the
evidence of what was found at the Vienna Hotel, on or
about the 22 September 1961, the police made a public
appeal for Peter Alphon to contact them. As a result, he
voluntarily presented himself to the police on
23 September; he had already been interviewed on
27 August and 7 September and he was interviewed again.
He was then put on two identity parades. The first was
on the 23 September (held at Cannon Row Police Station)
when Edward Blackhall, James Trower and Harold Hirons
(who was a garage attendant who served a light coloured
Morris Minor with 2 gallons of petrol at about midnight
on the night in question) attended. John Skillett was
away and did not attend. Valerie Storie attended the
second parade on 24 September 1961 at Guy’s Hospital. No
witness connected with the murder picked out Mr Alphon.
Valerie Storie picked out a man who was in fact a
volunteer; there is an issue about what was said of his
description (Ground 4).
38. In their
search for “J Ryan”, on 25 September 1961, the police
received information from a man who had written
postcards for Mr J Ryan who was then visiting Ireland;
one of the postcards was addressed to Mrs Hanratty, the
mother of James Hanratty. Thus, for the first time, the
police turned their attention to him.
39. At this
stage, before continuing the chronology of the
investigation, it is sensible to say something about
James Hanratty and to provide a summary of evidence of
his proved movements up to the time of his arrest. He
was born on 4 October 1936 and was thus aged 24 at the
time of the killing and 25 at the time of the trial. He
was 5ft. 7in. to 5ft. 8in. in height and had blue eyes.
His hair was brushed back without a parting but he had
what is sometimes described as a “widow’s peak,” or tuft
in the centre of his forehead, which he wore forward
(although when he gave evidence, he accepted that before
his last sentence he had worn it back). He had a London
accent. He pronounced “th” as “f”. His blood group was
group O and he was in addition a group O secretor.
40. At the
trial, at the request of the defence and doubtless in
order to demonstrate discrepancies with the description
provided by Valerie Storie, James Hanratty’s character
was put in evidence. He had appeared before the courts
on four previous occasions, all for offences of
dishonesty (taking and driving away or stealing cars,
housebreaking, burglary or larceny). In March 1958 he
was sentenced to three years’ corrective training (C.T.).
During the course of this sentence, he committed a
number of serious disciplinary offences and attempted to
escape several times as a result of which he was moved
from a training prison to Manchester Prison and
forfeited all his normal remission. (In other words, so
the prosecution alleged, ‘he had done the lot’.) He had
not been in a remand home: nor to Borstal. He had not
served a sentence of five years’ imprisonment and would
not in fact have been eligible for a sentence of
preventive detention (P.D.) until he was 30 years of
age. There was no evidence that he had been locked in a
cellar for days on end. By his own account at the trial
he lived on the proceeds of housebreaking. He was never
convicted of any offence involving violence or sex.
Several witnesses described his general behaviour,
including his behaviour with or towards girls and young
women, as proper and respectable. None had seen any
indications of violence. He had been released from
prison in March 1961.
41. More
information about his appearance was provided by Charles
France’s daughter, Carol. She was a trainee hairdresser
who, on the Bank Holiday weekend of Saturday 5 August,
at James Hanratty’s request, tinted his auburn coloured
hair black; his concern was apparently that it was too
conspicuous for a housebreaker. Miss France said she
re-tinted it black on Saturday 26 August as the colour
was fading and there was some re-growth showing at the
back. On 3 October 1961 (at a time when he knew the
police were looking for a dark haired man in respect of
the killing) he had the dye removed from his hair in an
endeavour to restore it to its original auburn. On 9
October 1961, he had had his hair bleached in Liverpool.
The dying and re-dying and bleaching had caused his hair
to take on a vividly unnatural colouring.
42. Bearing in
mind that Valerie Storie had described the gunman as
neat and tidily dressed in a suit, clothing was also
important. On 8 July 1961, James Hanratty, giving the
address 12 Sycamore Grove, Kingsbury, ordered a dark
suit with a stripe from Hepworths, Burnt Oak. He
collected the suit on 18 August and wore it the whole of
the following week (that is the week in which the murder
took place). The jacket to the suit was never found. The
trousers and waistcoat were ultimately seized; the
labels from them had been removed. The prosecution
argued that the jacket was the only part of the clothing
likely to have become bloodstained.
43. As to James
Hanratty’s movements, evidence was called by the
prosecution to the effect that he was at the France’s
house on Sunday 20 August and again on Monday 21 August
from about 2.30pm until he left at about 7pm.
Miss France remembered the date as she had a tooth out
on 21 August and the date of the dental appointment was
also proved. When he left, he said that he was going to
Liverpool to visit an aunt, and that he intended to take
her to ‘the dogs’. He was wearing the Hepworths suit. In
fact he did not go to Liverpool that night and his aunt,
who did in fact live in Liverpool, gave evidence at the
trial to the effect that she had not seen him for
several years. In the light of evidence called by the
defence in relation to a visit to a sweet shop in
Liverpool, to which we shall return, whether and if so,
when James Hanratty went to Liverpool at about this time
was important and complaint is now made (as it was on
the original appeal) that the jury were not
appropriately reminded of the effect or consequences of
this evidence: this is the one criticism of the summing
up which does not relate to developments of the law
since 1962 (Ground 17).
44. In any
event, James Hanratty agreed that he arrived at the
Vienna Hotel at between 11.30pm and midnight on Monday
21 August and stayed there that night in room 24. We
shall return to his explanation of his movements at the
time of the killing. As to the period thereafter,
however, there was evidence to establish his presence in
Liverpool on the evening of Thursday 24 August 1961
because an overnight telegram was sent by telephone at
8.40pm to Mr France which read:
“Having a nice time. Be home early
Friday morning for business. Yours sincerely Jim.”
The telegram was
sent from a telephone bar in the forecourt of
St. George’s Hall opposite the main railway station at
Lime Street, Liverpool. The sender was given as “Mr P
Ryan, Imperial Hotel, Russell Square, London”.
45. When giving
evidence, James Hanratty admitted sending the telegram
and stated that he returned to London early Friday
morning and went to see the Frances. They said this
visit was on the Saturday 26 August, when he arrived at
about 9am. According to Mr France, James Hanratty said
that he had been waiting at the station for a couple of
hours because he did not want to disturb them. He went
on to say that he had stayed at the Vienna Hotel on
Monday 21 August 1961 and produced the hotel bill. At no
stage did James Hanratty tell any member of the France
family that he had been to Rhyl.
46. On 4
September 1961, James Hanratty went to Ireland,
travelling from Heathrow to Dublin using the name Ryan.
He stayed at O’Flynn’s Hotel, signed the register ‘J
Ryan’ and gave his address as 72 Wood Lane, Kingsbury.
On 5 September 1961, he obtained an Irish driving
licence and travelled to Limerick where he stayed at the
Lomond Hotel. On 6 September 1961, he hired a car and
travelled to Cork. On 7 September 1961, he was involved
in a road traffic accident. Gerrard Leonard who met
James Hanratty in Ireland and accompanied him on trips
in a hire car described his driving as fast and slightly
reckless; it was Mr Leonard who informed the police of
the link between the name “J Ryan” and James Hanratty.
47. There was
evidence that James Hanratty was still wearing the
Hepworth suit at the end of September 1961. By the
beginning of October 1961, he was no longer wearing the
jacket of that suit but was still wearing the trousers
and waistcoat with a black jacket. At the beginning of
October 1961, James Hanratty broke into two houses in
the Stanmore area. From one he stole a black jacket. He
stated that he did this because he damaged the Hepworth
jacket in the course of one of these break-ins and that
he disposed of that jacket (which was never found) in a
nearby recreation ground.
48. On 5 October
1961, James Hanratty spoke to Mr France on the telephone
and said the police wanted him in connection with the A6
murder. This led to a series of telephone calls to the
police as to which there was a substantial dispute at
trial. The first telephone conversation on 6 October
1961, was made at about midday from a telephone box in
Soho. The evidence of DS Acott was to the effect that
James Hanratty said:
‘I know I have left my fingerprints
at different places and some different things and the
police want me, but I want to tell you that I did not do
that A6 murder.’
The second
telephone conversation took place at about 11pm on the
same day; that was limited to a discussion about getting
in contact with a newspaper and some conversation about
James Hanratty ringing his mother.
49. The final
telephone conversation took place on 7 October and James
Hanratty said: ‘This is Jimmy Ryan again, but you will
never guess where I am speaking from - Liverpool’.
According to the officer this was the first time
Liverpool had been mentioned. James Hanratty said that
on 21 August he had spent the night at the Vienna Hotel
and on Tuesday 22 August he had travelled to Liverpool
by train and stayed there with three friends for five
days before returning to London on Friday 25 August. He
declined to name the three friends because they had
criminal records. He said that they were receivers of
stolen goods and would not come forward on his behalf.
50. James
Hanratty’s account of these telephone calls at the trial
was that he had told the police during the first
telephone conversation that he had been in Liverpool on
the night of the murder. This had been a lie that was,
in effect, made up “on the spur of the moment” while on
the telephone to which, until the trial started, he had
felt committed. On 6 October 1961, he had in fact
telephoned Charles France and told him that he had an
alibi for the murder from people in Liverpool.
51. On 11
October 1961, James Hanratty travelled from Liverpool to
Blackpool, where he was seen and arrested. He gave the
name Peter Bates but was quickly identified and, on the
following day, he was seen by DS Acott and DSgt Oxford.
He was interviewed with DSgt Oxford making what was
described as a “sort of shorthand running note” of these
interviews; they were written in pencil on foolscap
sheets although there is an issue as to when and how
this was done (Ground 12). It is not disputed, however,
that after being cautioned James Hanratty said:
“I understand, but, as I told you, I
have got a perfect alibi for the murder … Fire away and
ask me any questions you like. I will answer them and
you will see I had nothing to do with the murder.”
52. There were
two interviews. The ‘perfect alibi’ was an account of
his trip to Liverpool, when he had visited three former
prison cellmates whom he was not then prepared to name.
Other aspects of the interview which James Hanratty
accepted he had said included the following facts:
i) After coming out of prison in
March 1961, he had enquired of a man called Fisher who
lived in Ealing about a gun, “a shooter to do some
stick-ups”; in evidence, he also admitted that he wanted
to be “a stick up man”, that he knew where to get a gun
if he wanted one but going on to say words to the effect
that he never owned a gun and that the whole thing was
just talk.
ii) His response to being told about
the cartridges found on the chair in the Vienna Hotel
was to ask what size the bullets were.
iii) He had stayed at the Vienna
Hotel on the night of 21 August, leaving at 9.00am the
following morning of 22 August. He had then travelled to
Paddington by mistake and then he went to Euston and had
caught a train to Liverpool.
53. There were
also a number of areas of dispute. In particular:
i) According to the officers, James
Hanratty told them that the telegram had been sent on
the Tuesday 22 August, the same day that he said he had
arrived in Liverpool. His account (put to them and
repeated in his evidence) was that he had told them at
the first interview that the telegram was sent on the
Thursday but that subsequently DS Acott said to him: “We
have enquired about this telegram Jimmie. You said to me
it was Tuesday. It was not you know.” He had replied:
“You have misunderstood me DS Acott. I said Thursday.”
ii) In the course of the first
interview he had said that he had thrown the Hepworth
jacket away after damaging it in the course of a
burglary committed in Stanmore; during the second
interview, the officers alleged (although he disputed
this) that he had then said that he had in fact
destroyed the jacket.
iii) More important, the evidence of
the officers was to the effect that at the end of each
interview he had spoken of going to “kip”, and in the
second interview used that word not once but twice. This
was, of course, a word which Valerie Storie recollected
that the gunman had used on several occasions. James
Hanratty not only denied that he had used the word in
interview; he denied ever using it.
54. Although
there was an issue about whether James Hanratty had
mentioned his Liverpool alibi to the police on the
telephone (which was an important detail because he
explained his late change of alibi on the fact that he
felt that he had already committed himself), on 13
October 1961, his solicitor, Mr Kleinman, certainly
wrote and notified the police of the details of that
alibi. It was explained that James Hanratty had gone to
Liverpool on 22 August 1961, had then visited a sweet
shop on Scotland Road and asked for directions to
Carlton or Talbot Road and had stayed in Liverpool until
25 August; he provided details of a visit to the cinema
and a visit to New Brighton on the Wirral.
55. James
Hanratty had been arrested and interviewed in Blackpool.
Identification parades were then arranged in Bedford and
complaint is made about failure to disclose a concern
expressed by DS Acott about steps which should be taken
to cover his (Hanratty’s) hair which was not reflected
in the evidence (Ground 5).
56. At an
identification parade held at Bedford Police Station on
13 October 1961, John Skillett, the driver of the car
who had expressed concern about the way in which a
Morris Minor had been driven in Gants Hill, identified
James Hanratty as the driver. The passenger, Edward
Blackhall picked out a volunteer. James Trower (who had
seen a Morris Minor turn into Avondale Crescent) also
identified James Hanratty.
Q. You were satisfied after
five minutes?
A. Yes; but I wanted to be
sure – I was not going to make a mistake this time.”
Q. Then
you asked him to speak, or the men to speak?
A. Yes.
Q. Then you were wheeled up
and down again at your request?
A. Yes.
Q. Again asked the men to
speak?
A. Yes.
Q. And then wheeled up and down
some more?
A. Yes.
Q.Miss Storie, one
appreciates your position of course, but it is my plain
duty to suggest to you, and I do suggest to you that,
although you may be convinced in your own mind, you are
nevertheless absolutely honest, but absolutely wrong. I
make that quite plain to you.
A. I do not agree with that
suggestion.”
58. And from the re-examination of Mr Graham Swanwick QC:
“Q. You have described the
second parade as: being wheeled up and down; I think you
said, asked the men to speak; wheeled up and down again
and asked them to speak again. You said that after five
minutes you were sure. At what stage in the process of
being wheeled up and down and asking the men to speak
were you first sure in your own mind?
A. I was absolutely certain as
soon as I heard him speak.
Q. The first time?
A. The first time.”
Mr Mansfield
argues that the way in which the ‘aural’ identification
took place was “incurably unfair” (Ground 6) and also
points to the failure to provide what would now be
required directions of law both as to the identification
generally and the voice recognition (Grounds 14 and 15).
59. On 14
October, after the identification by Valerie Storie,
James Hanratty was charged with murder but that was not
the end of the evidence to become available for the
prosecution. On 22 November 1961, a prison officer
overheard a prisoner Roy Langdale talking to another
prisoner on the bus taking them to court. He reported
the conversation to the Governor; this led to an
approach by the police. Langdale’s evidence was to the
effect that he had exercised with James Hanratty and
become friendly with him. During the course of their
conversations, James Hanratty eventually talked about
the murder, denying, but then admitting responsibility,
going on to discuss the circumstances in terms only
consistent with guilt. Needless to say, Roy Langdale was
a man with a criminal record and there were some
discrepancies between his statement and the evidence
which he gave. The confession was challenged in its
entirety.
62. James
Hanratty’s account of events on and after 22 August 1961
was broadly as follows. On 22 August, having left the
Vienna Hotel at about 9.30am, he walked to Paddington
Station by mistake. He then took a taxi to Euston
Station and travelled by train to Lime Street Station,
Liverpool (arriving at about 4.30pm); his intention was
to meet a man whom he had met in prison, but whom he had
not seen for 3-4 years, in order to dispose of a stolen
ring worth £350. The man (Mr Aspinall) was apparently in
the grocery or greengrocery business and James Hanratty
believed that he lived in Carlton, Tarleton or Talbot
Road. He had a wash at the station and then left his
suitcase in the left luggage office with a man whose
hand was deformed or withered. Having been directed by a
woman, he got on a bus at or near the station, but then
got off it when asked to pay the fare because the
conductor did not know the place he was looking for. He
got off in Scotland Road, spoke to two or three people
and walked into a sweet shop asking for directions. He
was told to go back into town because he had come too
far. He then walked back to Lime Street but could not
find the road. He had a meal and then came upon a man
standing on the steps of a billiard hall to whom he had
tried to sell a watch but was told that he could not go
upstairs because the premises were licensed. He
abandoned his search for Mr Aspinall.
63. The account
which had initially been provided to the police was to
the effect that James Hanratty then stayed in Liverpool
on the nights of 22 and 23 August with three men (whom,
repeatedly, he would not name he said for fear of
exposing their criminal activities), in a flat in the
Bull Ring. When opening the defence, however, Mr Sherrard
made it clear that this account was untrue. He had,
instead, gone to Rhyl.
64. James
Hanratty told the jury that, in fact, he had left
Liverpool on the same evening that he arrived and
travelled (at about 7.30pm) by bus to Rhyl, where he
stayed for two nights. His object was to find another
man, Terry Evans, but then known to him only as ‘John’,
whom he had previously met in Rhyl and who, he thought,
would help him to dispose of the stolen jewellery.
65. In giving
evidence, he provided a certain amount of detail about
‘John’. John worked on the bumper cars on a fairground
operated by a man called Arthur Webber, and James
Hanratty had first met him on about 25 July 1961 when he
had travelled to Rhyl and visited the fairground where
John worked. He had asked for a job at the fairground
and, having nowhere else to stay, had spent the night at
John’s home. The following day, John had given him a
pair of shoes on the understanding that James Hanratty
would pay for them out of his wages; he did not,
however, return to the fairground and disappeared with
the shoes. They had never, in fact, made contact again.
66. James
Hanratty also provided further information about Rhyl.
He described the boarding house in which he had stayed,
providing detail of its location and furniture. He spent
the following day trying to find John but did not go to
the fairground because he had gone away after he had
been employed there and did not want to go back.
Unsuccessful in his search, on Thursday 24 August, he
returned to Liverpool where he saw a film, ‘The Guns of
Navarone’. Having tried unsuccessfully to see a boxing
match, he sent the telegram to the Frances (which was,
in fact, timed at 8.40pm) and returned to London on
Thursday night. Again, he described the passengers. When
he arrived on the Friday he went to see the Frances. He
explained how he had worn the new Hepworth’s suit save
for when it was at the cleaners and how he had torn the
coat (which he had discarded and then stolen a
replacement during the course of a burglary).
67. In October,
when a description was put out, he telephoned DS Acott
and told him that he was in Liverpool on the relevant
dates; in the second call, he said he was going to
Liverpool and in the third call that he was in Liverpool
and that his endeavours to get his friends to help had
failed. He admitted that he had lied but had not
understood that he was being sought as the murderer: he
thought the police were looking for a man who may have
slept in the same bedroom as the murderer. On the first
occasion when DS Acott had asked about his whereabouts
on 22 and 23 August, he had been confused and said
Liverpool. The approach to the issue of lies is
criticised (Ground 16).
68. During the
interviews after his arrest, he said that he had invited
the police to ask any questions because he had nothing
to do with the murder; he told them about going to the
pictures, the boxing match, the Vienna Hotel (but not
room 24) and the sweet shop. He was told he had to give
particulars of the three men but said he was too
frightened to admit that this was a lie. He agreed that
he had had a conversation about a gun but said that he
had never intended to get one, had never become a
stick-up man, had never got a gun and had never shot the
man. Further, he denied ever having said anything in
interview about going to sleep and had not used the word
‘kip’ either in the interview or at all. He said the
evidence of Roy Langdale was untrue.
69. A number of
witnesses were called to support different parts of this
account. First, Mrs Olive Dinwoodie, an assistant in the
sweet shop at 408 Scotland Road, Liverpool, said that a
man who looked like James Hanratty did call at the sweet
shop (of which she was temporarily in charge), in the
afternoon and asked for Tarleton Road: but she was
certain that the incident occurred on Monday 21 August
1961. Mrs Dinwoodie was in the sweet shop with her
granddaughter Barbara Ford, aged 13.
70. This
evidence was similar to that given by Albert Harding, a
long-distance lorry driver. He had been called by the
prosecution to support their contention that 21 August
was the date that Mrs Dinwoodie was at the shop; he had
visited both on Monday 21 and Tuesday 22 August and said
that Mrs Dinwoodie was only present at the same time as
he was there on Monday. Bearing in mind that 21 August
was the date that James Hanratty had stayed at the
Vienna Hotel, it was the case for the prosecution that
he had not been in Liverpool that day and that he had
found out about someone else who had made the enquiry
when he went to Liverpool to purchase an alibi.
71. Robert Kempt, the Manager of a billiard hall in
Liverpool, confirmed his recollection of an occasion
when he was standing at the bottom of the steps near
Lime Street Station when a man approached and asked him
to buy a watch. He gave evidence of a conversation in
similar terms to that recounted by James Hanratty: he
said it could have happened at any time between June and
September. Similarly, Terry Evans confirmed that in July
1961, James Hanratty had asked for a job and worked for
a couple of hours (which was confirmed by Mr Webber),
sleeping at his (Evans’) house. He said that James
Hanratty had no reason to believe that he would be
interested in stolen property.
72. The Rhyl
alibi received further support from Mrs Grace Jones, who
ran a bed and breakfast house at “Ingledene”, 19 Kinmel
Street, Rhyl, and whose own description of her house
broadly matched that which James Hanratty had provided.
She went on to say that a young man had stayed at her
house for two nights of 22 and 23 August 1961 and she
believed that it was James Hanratty; she thought he
stayed in room 4. It is relevant to note, however, that
Mrs Jones’ credibility as a witness was damaged when she
was seen talking to Terry Evans, notwithstanding the
Judge’s instruction, and was not truthful about what had
been discussed (having, in fact, been talking about
James Hanratty’s appearance). Her records also had
discrepancies and she agreed that he could have stayed
any time after 19 August. Further, the prosecution
called three witnesses in rebuttal who had in fact
stayed in the house on the relevant nights, one of whom
(Mr Sayle) in fact stayed in room 4 on the nights of the
21, 22 and 23 August 1961. The prosecution also relied
on evidence to the effect that there were eight adults
and at least five children staying at the guesthouse
during the week of 19-26 August 1961 suggesting that
there was no room for James Hanratty in addition. The
police did not, however, disclose other information in
their possession (Ground 13).
73. The defence
also called:
i) Mary Meaden who had been out with
James Hanratty on occasions in September 1961 and
described him as very well behaved.
ii) Mrs Willis, who lived at
Knebworth and who had been robbed at gunpoint on 24
August 1961 by a man who did not resemble James Hanratty.
iii) Mrs Dalal who lived in Upper
Richmond Road West and who had been robbed on 7
September 1961 by a man who had claimed he was the ‘A6
murderer’. She picked out Peter Alphon on an identity
parade.
iv) Two prisoners from Brixton prison
(Emery and Blythe) who said that they exercised with
James Hanratty and that they had never seen Roy Langdale
speak to James Hanratty.
v) Three witnesses who confirmed that
two houses had been burgled in the Stanmore area on 1
October 1961 and that a black jacket had been stolen.
SUMMARY OF THE SUBMISSIONS
75. When
considering the effect of any material which is now
relied upon (whether as new evidence or undisclosed
material at the time of the trial), it is worth bearing
in mind how the rival contentions were advanced at the
trial itself. Fortunately, counsel’s speeches remain
available and the arguments advanced (albeit not
necessarily in this order) can usefully be summarised.
76. Thus, the
prosecution relied on the following features:
i) The identification made by Valerie
Storie, involving as it did not only his physical
appearance but also his voice (including his accent,
pronunciation and use of the word ‘kip’) and his
clothing. It is also possible to point to some of the
things which the gunman said as being consistent with
James Hanratty (including the name Jim): on the other
hand, a number of the facts which she recalled did not
fit with background information about him.
ii) The visual identifications by
John Skillett and James Trower of James Hanratty as the
erratic driver of the Morris Minor in the vicinity of
Avondale Crescent (where the car used by Michael
Gregsten was later found). In that regard, the
prosecution also relied on the fact that Leonard in
Ireland and Carol France in this country also spoke of
James Hanratty’s erratic driving.
iii) In the light of the fact that
the gunman appeared to be familiar with the roadworks in
the Harrow area, the fact was that James Hanratty’s
parents lived in Kingsbury with the result that he
would, indeed, be familiar with the Harrow area.
iv) The presence, on 11 September
1961, of the two cartridge cases fired from the murder
weapon, in room 24 at the Vienna Hotel. It was common
ground that the room had been occupied by James Hanratty
on 21 August 1961 and, on the evidence, it appeared that
only one of the beds had been occupied on only one other
occasion between then and the date they were found.
v) The fact that the murder weapon
together with ammunition, wrapped in a handkerchief,
were discovered under the back seat of a bus, that is,
the very place which it was common ground James Hanratty
had spoken of as a place to dispose of unwanted goods.
vi) James Hanratty’s conduct in
removing the dye from his hair on 3 October 1961 when he
knew that he was wanted by the police.
vii) James Hanratty’s admissions that
he had made enquiries for a gun, his desire to be a
“stick-up man”, and his ability to acquire a gun.
viii) The admitted lies about the
stay in Liverpool with the three men on the nights of 22
and 23 August 1961 and the implausibility of one of the
explanations for these lies (maintained at trial) to the
effect that James Hanratty did not think that he would
be able to find the house in Rhyl.
ix) The implausibility of the reason
given by James Hanratty for going to Liverpool and for
abandoning the search for the man who lived in Carlton
or Tarleton Road or Street.
x) The evidence that the sweet shop
incident occurred on Monday 21 and not Tuesday 22 August
1961, so not involving James Hanratty.
xi) The implausibility of the reason
given for the telegram sent on Thursday 24 August 1961
(namely that he had promised to write to Mrs France),
and the inference that this was an attempt to provide or
bolster up a false alibi: the telegram had been sent at
8.40pm to arrive the following morning, at the same time
he would have been travelling on the midnight train.
xii) The confession to Roy Langdale
during the course of exercise in prison.
xiii) The fact that James Hanratty
put forward two alibis, one of which was admittedly
false and the other, also implausible, asserted only
after the commencement of the trial thereby limiting the
opportunity to investigate. This compounds with James
Hanratty’s failure to take any steps between the 7 and
11 October 1961 (when James Hanratty was in the
Liverpool area) to find the boarding house in Rhyl.
xiv) The implausibility of the reason
for the visit to Rhyl, namely to find a man he had met
only once before in order to sell stolen jewellery
without knowing where Terry Evans was to be found or
having any good reason to believe that Terry Evans was
interested in buying stolen jewellery.
xv) The unsatisfactory state of the
evidence emanating from Mrs Jones whose description of
the house included a green bath (recollected by James
Hanratty) albeit that the bathroom had a bed in it. This
evidence had to be contrasted with the records which
revealed only one single room in which James Hanratty
could have stayed (room 4, occupied on 21, 22 and 23
August by a witness called in rebuttal) and the evidence
of the guests who did stay in Mrs Jones’ house which
effectively excluded James Hanratty’s presence on 22 or
23 August.
xvi) The evidence of blood group
consistency, namely that James Hanratty (albeit along
with 80% of 40-45% of the male population) was a group O
secretor as was the semen found on Valerie Storie’s
clothing (Michael Gregsten being a group AB secretor).
77. The defence
described the case as “sagging with coincidences” and
relied on the following features:
i) Valerie Storie had only a limited
opportunity of seeing the man. Furthermore:
a) Her facial
identification was weakened by her incorrect
identification of the 24 September.
b There was a
conflict between her evidence and the evidence of John
Kerr (the person who had discovered her); he said that
Valerie Storie had spoken of the man as having light
fairish hair and had said that he had been picked up at
about 9.00pm or 9.30pm at Slough.
c) The
mispronunciation of “th” was quite common among
Londoners.
d) While some of
the things said by the murderer were consistent with
James Hanratty’s personal history, others were not.
e) Her
description of the murderer’s knowledge of cars and how
to drive them was inconsistent with James Hanratty’s
experience and driving ability.
ii) The other identifying witnesses
(John Skillett and James Trower) also had only limited
opportunity to see the driver of the Morris Minor.
Further, Edward Blackhall (Mr Skillett’s passenger) had
picked out another man on 13 October (having already
picked out a man on the 23 September 1961) and James
Trower’s evidence was also unsatisfactory and
contradicted by Paddy Hogan who gave evidence for the
defence.
iii) Harold Hirons, a garage
attendant who put petrol in the car while Valerie Storie
and Michael Gregsten were still in it, had not
identified James Hanratty.
iv) It was unlikely that the murderer
would have fired two bullets before the murder and then
dropped or left the two spent cartridge cases in the
Vienna Hotel and that on the probabilities these two
cases came to be there after the murder. The implication
of this submission is that these cartridge cases must
have been placed in the room by others, perhaps in an
effort to implicate James Hanratty and exculpate the
true culprit, possibly Peter Alphon.
v) In any event, the witnesses who
gave evidence from the Vienna Hotel were unreliable:
room 24 had or may have been occupied by other persons
(and, in particular, by Peter Alphon) in addition to the
one other person said to have occupied the room for one
night between 21 August and 11 September.
vi) The use of the space under the
back seat of a bus as a receptacle was not uncommon with
the result that the finding of the murder weapon in such
a place was not probative against James Hanratty.
vii) There were a number of concerns
about the evidence of the police officers. More must
have been said during the course of the interviews than
was written down and there were challenges as to that
which was written. Thus, there were serious issues about
when and how Liverpool and the three men were mentioned
and the conversation about the telegram; further, James
Hanratty denied ever using the word “kip”.
viii) The interview also had to be
approached with care in other respects and allowances
had to be made for James Hanratty’s character and
personality. Thus, his admission to the police
concerning a gun and about becoming a “stick-up” man
were simply examples of his being boastful. His lies
about Liverpool and the three men occurred on the spur
of the moment, when he could not remember the details of
the Rhyl boarding house; his persistence in them because
he was afraid of the consequences of changing his alibi
was down to foolishness rather than anything more
sinister.
ix) James Hanratty was the man in the
sweet shop incident which could only have occurred on
the Monday 21 or Tuesday 22 August; as there was
evidence, both from prosecution and defence, that he was
in London on the Monday it could only have happened on
Tuesday 22 August 1961 which, by itself, demonstrated
that he was not the gunman.
x) Other features of James Hanratty’s
evidence were amply confirmed by independent witnesses.
Thus:
a) a
conversation in relation to the sale of a watch in
Liverpool was confirmed by Mr Kempt;
b) he correctly
described Grace Jones’ boarding house and despite her
confused and unsatisfactory evidence Mrs Jones was
telling the truth when she said that he had stayed at
her house on 22 and 23 August.
c) he had
previously met Terry Evans and did try and find him in
Rhyl.
xi) The evidence given by Roy
Langdale was from a suspect source. It was controverted
not only by James Hanratty himself (and was inconsistent
with his constant reiteration of his innocence) but also
by the evidence of two other prisoners.
xii) As to the scientific evidence,
there was neither blood nor fibre found on any of his
clothing. The fact that he was a group O secretor did
not advance the case: some 36% of the white male
population were group O secretors, including Peter
Alphon.
xiii) The jury knew about James
Hanratty’s record and this incident was out of
character. He had no previous convictions for offences
involving violence, sexual assaults or dangerous
driving.
78. From the
account of the facts which we have set out, coupled with
the summary of the submissions of counsel at the trial,
it is apparent, that the only issue with which the jury
was concerned at the trial was the identity of the
person who was guilty of murdering Michael Gregsten and
raping Valerie Storie. By finding James Hanratty guilty
the jury resolved that issue. That on the evidence which
they heard, the jury were entitled to come to this
conclusion was made clear by the previous decision of
this Court and the conclusion of Mr Hawser to which we
have already referred (see paragraphs 4,5 and 8).
Mr Mansfield does not suggest otherwise. In addition, he
accepts that judged by the standards of 1962 the summing
up of Gorman J, except in one respect, was extremely
fair and beyond criticism.
79. With this
background the onus must be squarely on the appellant to
establish that the appeal should succeed. Why then is it
said that an appeal which has previously failed should
now after all these years succeed? The complaints which
are made are based on non-disclosure for the purposes of
the trial by the prosecution, fresh evidence which was
not available at the trial and, with one addition,
omissions from the summing up of directions which by
present day standards, as opposed to those which existed
in 1962, should have been included in the summing up.
80. The
prosecution do not dispute there was non-disclosure as
alleged and have not relied on the substantial
difference between the duties of disclosure on the
prosecution today as compared with 1962. Furthermore, it
is not suggested that the appellant’s additional
evidence is not admissible.
81. In opposing
the appeal the prosecution unusually wish to rely on
fresh evidence, in the form of DNA findings which do not
directly address the grounds of appeal but which the
prosecution contend as a result of scientific
developments clearly establish the guilt of James
Hanratty. The appellant challenges the admissibility and
relevance of the DNA evidence which was obtained from a
piece of fabric from Valerie Storie’s knickers and from
the handkerchief which was found with the murder weapon
under the back seat of the bus. They also seek to give
an explanation for the findings consistent with James
Hanratty’s innocence by alleging that the exhibits on
which the tests were conducted could have been
contaminated due to the failure to preserve them in the
way they would be today.
THE LAW
The Role of the
Court of Appeal
82. In support
of the contention that the DNA evidence is not
admissible or relevant, Mr Mansfield submits that it is
the jury and not the Court of Appeal which, as the
tribunal of fact, has the responsibility of determining
the guilt or innocence of the defendant. He contends
that if this Court were to rely on the DNA evidence they
would be usurping the role of the jury. He adds that the
Court of Appeal’s role is one of review and fresh
evidence which does not relate to and is independent of
fresh evidence relied on by the appellant cannot assist
this Court in the performance of its task as a court of
review.
83. On behalf of
the prosecution, Mr Sweeney argues that the DNA evidence
is admissible and we should rely on it, if we are
satisfied that it establishes James Hanratty’s
responsibility for the murder, as part of our reasoning
for rejecting each of the grounds of appeal. Mr Sweeney
suggests that the DNA evidence clearly establishes the
correctness of the decision of the jury and proves
beyond doubt that there has been no miscarriage of
justice.
84. On the
hearing of the appeal we allowed the evidence as to DNA
to be placed before us, but indicated that we would give
our decision as to whether we would admit the evidence
in the course of giving this judgment.
85. The issues
on this appeal and, in particular, the dispute as to the
admissibility of the DNA evidence raise in acute form
the question as to what is the precise role of this
court when hearing an appeal and the extent of its
discretion to admit fresh evidence. This question is
undoubtedly one of general importance, but it is also
one on which the authorities now provide considerable
assistance, even though Mr Mansfield is right in
submitting that they do not provide binding authority as
to the relevance and admissibility of the DNA evidence.
The statutory
provisions
86. The starting
point for our consideration of these issues are the
relevant statutory provisions. On references by the
Criminal Cases Review Commission under section 9(1)(a)
of the Criminal Appeal Act 1995, the references are to
be treated in accordance with section 9(2) of that Act
as an appeal against conviction under section 1 of the
Criminal Appeal Act 1968.
87. Fortunately,
the role of this Court on an appeal under the 1968 Act
has recently been considered by the House of Lords in R
v Pendleton [2002] 1WLR 72. Lord Bingham of Cornhill
referred to the legislative history of that section and
in particular section 4(1) of the Criminal Appeal Act
1907, which is the predecessor of section 2 of the 1968
Act. He described that provision as being the “core
provision” and added that the section “clearly expresses
Parliament’s overriding intention that the interests of
justice should be served (by this Court) and also its
expectation that this Court would have to grapple with
potentially difficult factual issues;” (paragraph 7).
Lord Bingham then went on to state that:
“Although the 1907 Act has been
repeatedly amended, the scheme of the Act has not been
fundamentally altered. The most notable change has been
the granting by the Criminal Appeal Act 1964 and the
extension by the Criminal Justice Act 1988 of a power,
on the allowing of an appeal against conviction, to
order a retrial. The core provision contained in section
4 of the 1907 Act is now expressed more shortly and
simply in section 2 of the 1968 Act as substituted by
section 2(1) of the Criminal Appeal Act 1995: “(I)
Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court of
Appeal- (a) shall allow an appeal against conviction if
they think that the conviction is unsafe; and (b) shall
dismiss such an appeal in any other case.”
The most important lesson to be
learnt from this part of Lord Bingham speech is that
Parliament’s overriding intention in the 1907 Act, and
now in the 1968 Act, is that it should be this Court’s
central role to ensure that justice has been done and to
rectify injustice.
88. The next
provision to which it is necessary to refer is section
23 of the 1968 Act as amended by sections 4(1) and 29
of, and Schedule 2 paragraph 4(1)(3) and Schedule 3 to,
the 1995 Act. The section is in these terms:
“(1) For the purposes of an appeal
under this Part of this Act the Court of Appeal may, if
they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of
justice- (a) order the production of any document,
exhibit or other thing connected with the proceedings,
the production of which appears to them necessary for
the determination of the case; (b) order any witness who
would have been a compellable witness in the proceedings
from which the appeal lies to attend for examination and
be examined before the court, whether or not he was
called in those proceedings; and (c) receive any
evidence which was not adduced in the proceedings from
which the appeal lies.
(2) The Court of Appeal shall, in
considering whether to receive any evidence, have regard
in particular to- (a) whether the evidence appears to
the court to be capable of belief; (b) whether it
appears to the court that the evidence may afford any
ground for allowing the appeal; (c) whether the evidence
would have been admissible in the proceedings from which
the appeal lies on an issue which is the subject of the
appeal; and (d) whether there is a reasonable
explanation for the failure to adduce the evidence in
those proceedings.
(3) Subsection (1)(c) above applies
to any evidence of a witness (including the appellant)
who is competent but not compellable.
(4) For the purposes of an appeal
under this Part of this Act, the Court of Appeal may, if
they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of
justice, order the examination of any witness whose
attendance might be required under subsection (1)(b)
above to be conducted, in any manner provided by rules
of court, before any judge or officer of the court or
other person appointed by the court for the purpose, and
allow the admission of any depositions so taken as
evidence before the court.”
89. A feature of
section 23 is that it makes the discretion which the
section gives to this Court to receive fresh evidence,
subject to an express requirement that this Court shall
consider it is “necessary or expedient in the interests
of justice” to do so. Thus, the section echoes the “core
provision” identified by Lord Bingham which is
implicitly a part of section 2 of the 1968 Act.
Subsection (2) does no more than identify the different
considerations to which the Court is required to have
regard when exercising that discretion.
90. Mr Mansfield
referred us to the legislative history of section 23 in
its present form. He pointed out section 23 is derived
from section 9 of the 1907 Act. He argues the amendments
which were made to section 23 restrict the discretion of
the court to admit fresh evidence. We do not accept that
this is the position. The changes simplified the
language of the section but did not affect the
overriding purpose of the section which was, and is,
that the power to admit fresh evidence should be to
assist this Court in its task of furthering the
interests of justice.
91. In
performing this task the Court should have in mind that,
in the same speech, Lord Bingham also emphasised, that
while the Court of Appeal is entrusted “with a power of
review to guard against the possibility of injustice”,
it should not intrude “into the territory which properly
belongs to the jury” (paragraph 17). He also endorsed
the approach in Stafford v DPP [1974] AC 878. What made
a decision “unsafe” was to be determined by deciding
what was the effect of the fresh evidence on the minds
of the court and not by asking what might be the effect
that the evidence would have on the mind of the jury.
This Court has, however, to bear “very clearly in mind
that the question for its consideration is whether the
conviction is safe and not whether the accused is
guilty”. The Court has also to remember that it should
not become the primary decision-maker as it has not
heard the evidence which the jury heard. So it is
perfectly in order for “the Court of Appeal in a case of
any difficulty, to test their own provisional view by
asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial,
might reasonably have affected the decision of the trial
jury to convict. If it might, the conviction must be
thought to be unsafe” (paragraph 19). To cite Lord
Bingham again:
“Trial by jury does not mean trial by
jury in the first instance and trial by judges of the
Court of Appeal in the second. The Court of Appeal is
entrusted with a power of review to be exercised with
caution, mindful that the Court of Appeal is not privy
to the jury’s deliberations and must not intrude into
territory which properly belongs to the jury” (paragraph
17).
92. On this
aspect of the law, Lord Bingham’s views were endorsed by
all the other members of the House and they deserve our
particular attention. (Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough
delivered the only other separate speech and (at
paragraph 35) he expressly agreed with this aspect of
the speech of Lord Bingham.)
93. The decision
in Pendleton was subsequently applied by this Court in R
v Hakala (19th March 2002: case number 2000/03307/Z4).
In his judgment, Judge LJ made this statement, which is
particularly relevant to the issues before us:
“The judgment in “fresh evidence”
cases will inevitably therefore continue to focus on the
facts before the trial jury, in order to ensure that the
right question - the safety, or otherwise, of the
conviction - is answered. It is integral to process that
if the fresh evidence is disputed, this Court must
decide whether and to what extent it should be accepted
or rejected, and if it is to be accepted, to evaluate
its importance, or otherwise, relative to the remaining
material which was before the trial jury: hence the jury
impact test. Indeed, although the question did not arise
in Pendleton, the fresh evidence produced by the
appellant, or indeed the Crown, may serve to confirm
rather than undermine the safety of the conviction.
Unless this evaluation is carried out, it is difficult
to see how this Court can carry out its statutory
responsibility in a fresh evidence case, and exercise
its “powers of review to guard against the possibility
of injustice”. However the safety of the appellant’s
conviction is examined, the essential question, and
ultimately the only question for this Court, is whether,
in the light of the fresh evidence, the convictions are
unsafe”(emphasis added).
The
Admissibility of Fresh Evidence and the Two Different
Grounds for Allowing an Appeal
94. Assisted by
these authorities it is clear that the overriding
consideration for this Court in deciding whether fresh
evidence should be admitted on the hearing of an appeal
is whether the evidence will assist the Court to achieve
justice. Justice can equally be achieved by upholding a
conviction if it is safe or setting it aside if it is
unsafe.
95. Here it is
important to have in mind that a conviction can be
unsafe for two distinct reasons that may, but do not
necessarily, overlap. The first reason being that there
is a doubt as to the safety of the conviction and the
second being that the trial was materially flawed. The
second reason can be independent of guilt because of the
fundamental constitutional requirement that even a
guilty defendant is entitled, before being found guilty,
to have a trial which conforms with at least the minimum
standards of what is regarded in this jurisdiction as
being an acceptable criminal trial. These standards
include those that safeguard a defendant from serious
procedural, but not technical, unfairness. A technical
flaw is excluded because it is wrong to elevate the
procedural rules that govern a trial to a level where
they become an obstacle as opposed to an aid to
achieving justice.
96. Fresh
evidence which is of sufficient quality and is relevant
to the question of guilt will usually contribute to the
question of the safety of the conviction and so will be
legally admissible if in its discretion the court
decides to admit it. Where what is in question is not
the evidence of guilt but the procedural quality of a
trial, evidence relating to guilt will usually not be
admissible because it will not address the defect in the
trial unless it helps to place the defect in context.
Evidence as to what happened at the trial may on the
other hand be very important as to the extent to which
the trial is flawed. It follows that relevance of the
fresh evidence may not be capable of being determined
until after the purpose for which it is said to be
relevant has been ascertained. The approach to
procedural and evidential issues will not be the same.
97. It is also
necessary to distinguish between procedural flaws which
are technical and those which are not. Clear guidance as
to this distinction has also been provided by Lord
Bingham in the recent Privy Council decision of Randall
v R (16 April 2002) [2002] UK PC 19 at paragraph 28:
“While reference has been made above
to some of the rules which should be observed in a
well-conducted trial to safeguard the fairness of the
proceedings, it is not every departure from good
practice which renders a trial unfair. Inevitably, in
the course of a long trial, things are done or said
which should not be done or said. Most occurrences of
that kind do not undermine the integrity of the trial,
particularly if they are isolated and particularly if,
where appropriate, they are the subject of a clear
judicial direction. It would emasculate the trial
process, and undermine public confidence in the
administration of criminal justice, if a standard of
perfection were imposed that was incapable of attainment
in practice. But the right of a criminal defendant to a
fair trial is absolute. There will come a point when the
departure from good practice is so gross, or so
persistent, or so prejudicial, or so irremediable that
an appellate court will have no choice but to condemn a
trial as unfair and quash a conviction as unsafe,
however strong the grounds for believing the defendant
to be guilty. The right to a fair trial is one to be
enjoyed by the guilty as well as the innocent, for a
defendant is presumed to be innocent until proved to be
otherwise in a fairly conducted trial.”
We would also refer to the way the
subject was encapsulated by Carswell LCJ in R v Iain Hay
Gordon [2002] unreported CAR (3298) at paragraph 29:
“It seems to us that it is now
possible to formulate two propositions in respect of
irregularities at trial, which formed the subject of a
good deal of argument before us:
1. If there was a material
irregularity, the conviction may be set aside even if
the evidence of the appellant’s guilt is clear.
2. Not every irregularity will cause
a conviction to be set aside. There is room for the
application of a test similar in effect to that of the
former proviso, viz whether the irregularity was so
serious that a miscarriage of justice has actually
occurred.”
The Effect of
the Passage of Time
98. The
non-technical approach is especially important in
references by the Commission such as this since
standards may have changed because of the passage of
time. For understandable reasons, it is now accepted in
judging the question of fairness of a trial, and
fairness is what rules of procedure are designed to
achieve, we apply current standards irrespective of when
the trial took place. But this does not mean that
because contemporary rules have not been complied with a
trial which took place in the past must be judged on the
false assumption it was tried yesterday. Such an
approach could achieve injustice because the
non-compliance with rules does not necessarily mean that
a defendant has been treated unfairly. In order to
achieve justice, non-compliance with rules which were
not current at the time of the trial may need to be
treated differently from rules which were in force at
the time of trial. If certain of the current
requirements of, for example, a summing up are not
complied with at a trial which takes place today this
can almost automatically result in a conviction being
set aside but this approach should not be adopted in
relation to trials which took place before the rule was
established. The fact that what has happened did not
comply with a rule which was in force at the time of
trial makes the non-compliance more serious than it
would be if there was no rule in force. Proper standards
will not be maintained unless this Court can be
expected, when appropriate, to enforce the rules by
taking a serious view of a breach of the rules at the
time they are in force. It is not appropriate to apply
this approach to a forty year-old case.
99. Another
difference between a case such as this and a case which
has only been tried recently is that this Court can
expect in the latter type of case to be provided with an
explanation for situations which give rise to a
suspicion of possible impropriety. There may be an
explanation for what happened which shows there is no
cause for suspicion, but this may be impossible to
discover due to the passage of time. This has to be
borne in mind, particularly where to draw an adverse
inference could reflect, as in this case, on the
integrity of those who are not alive. (Here this is true
of DS Acott and D Sgt Oxford.)
100. The
question of whether a trial is sufficiently seriously
flawed, so as to make a conviction unsafe because it
does not comply with what would be regarded today as the
minimum standards, must be approached in the round,
taking into account all the relevant circumstances, and
this is what we propose to do notwithstanding the fact
that Mr Sweeney did not seek to rely on the different
standards which existed at the time of the trial and the
standards today.
Admitting Fresh
Evidence at the Request of the Prosecution
101. It is now
necessary to concentrate on situations in which it can
be appropriate for this Court to receive fresh evidence
at the request of the prosecution, such as the findings
of the DNA tests on which the prosecution are seeking to
rely in this appeal. It is Mr Mansfield’s contention
that if this Court is not to exceed its role as a Court
of review it can only receive fresh evidence on behalf
of the prosecution if that evidence is being relied upon
to rebut fresh evidence introduced on the appeal by an
appellant. In support of his contention, Mr Mansfield
focuses upon section 23(2). He points out correctly that
the subsection contains a mandatory requirement, and
that the requirement as to (b) in particular is only
likely to be complied with by an appellant and not the
prosecution. The prosecution are not going to submit
evidence which will undermine the conviction. He
therefore submits that evidence cannot be allowed to be
placed before the Court by the prosecution unless the
evidence on which the prosecution relies is to be used
in order to evaluate or rebut fresh evidence that the
appellant has adduced.
102. We do not
accept this submission. Subsection (2) is subordinate to
subsection (1). It is subsection (1) which confers a
general discretion on the Court to be exercised in the
interests of justice. Subsection (2) identifies the
considerations to which this Court is required to have
regard when exercising its discretion under subsection
(1). If this Court has regard to the matters referred to
in subsection (2), the Court has done its duty
irrespective of how it exercises its discretion. If it
is the prosecution which wishes to introduce fresh
evidence which is intended to weaken the appeal this
does not mean that the evidence cannot be admitted. All
that section 23(2)(b) requires is that this Court, when
exercising its discretion, has regard to the fact that
the evidence will not “afford any ground for allowing
the appeal” but on the contrary support the conviction.
To apply subsection (2) as Mr Mansfield contends would
mean that the Court would be unable to admit evidence
even if the admission of that evidence is very much in
accord with the interests of justice and its rejection
could result in injustice. In addition, it would
undermine the public’s confidence in the justice system.
103. Furthermore
Mr Mansfield’s approach to section 23 is inconsistent
with the decisions of this Court in Gilfoyle [1996] 1 Cr
App R 302 and in Craven [2001] 2 Cr App R 12. In Craven
there was a failure by the prosecution to disclose
certain material which could have been of relevance to
the defence at the trial, and in an important passage in
the judgment, Latham LJ stressed:
“. . . that this Court, empowered as
it is under section 23 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968
to consider the jury’s verdict in the light of fresh
evidence, should do so in the light of all the fresh
evidence that is available to it. We are entitled, as it
seems to us, to consider whether the material which was
withheld could have affected the jury’s verdict in the
light of all the facts now known to this Court. If it
could have done, the conviction would be unsafe. If, on
the other hand, the material that has been withheld has
not, on a proper analysis of the facts known to this
Court, undermined in any way the verdict of the jury,
then the conviction will be safe. In evaluating the
significance of the evidence that has been withheld in
the context of all the information now available, we
consider we properly secure the rights of the defence
for the purposes of article 6 of the Convention and
serve the interests of justice. We acknowledge that in
carrying out this exercise we are trespassing upon what
at trial would be the function of the jury. But that is
the inevitable consequence in any case involving fresh
evidence. It seems to us that if on a proper analysis of
the information available to this Court, the only
reasonable conclusion is that the conviction is safe, in
that the jury’s verdict in the light of all the relevant
material was correct, this Court would not be carrying
out its statutory obligation if it did give affect to
that conclusion.”
104. Mr
Mansfield argues that the approach of Latham LJ is
inconsistent with the decision of the House of Lords in
Pendleton and therefore we should not follow it. We do
not agree. Latham LJ did not have the advantage that we
have of the decision of Pendleton but his general
approach can be satisfactorily reconciled with that of
Lord Bingham. It is to be recognised that the evidence
was not being introduced to remedy a trial which was
fatally flawed because, for example, the trial was an
abuse of process or should have been stopped on a
submission of no case to answer for lack of evidence,
but so that the question of the correctness of the
conviction could be considered in the round.
105. Applying
this reasoning we came to the conclusion that the DNA
evidence on this appeal is evidence which we are
entitled to admit under section 23. Furthermore we
conclude that in our discretion we should admit the
evidence while recognising:
(1) that its weight, if any, will
depend on whether the appellant may be right that the
explanation for the DNA findings is contamination.
(2) that if the appellant is able to
show that because of lack of disclosure or the
misdirections in the summing up the trial was still
fatally flawed the DNA evidence will not rescue the
conviction.
THE DNA EVIDENCE.
106. We turn to
the DNA evidence. As already noted seminal fluid was
found on Valerie Storie’s knickers and one of her slips.
At the time all that could be shown was that the
rapist’s and hence the murderer’s blood group was O
secretor. So was James Hanratty’s and Peter Alphon’s
together with 40% of the male population. The
handkerchief found with the murder weapon bore traces of
nasal mucus. Mucus was not capable of being analysed for
blood type. Evidence based upon the comparison of hairs
and fibres was inconclusive. Apart from some seminal
staining on James Hanratty’s striped trousers, said to
be part of the Hepworth suit, that was the extent of the
scientific evidence at trial.
107. During the
1980s and 1990s important work was carried out in the
field of genetic profiling based on a complex chemical
found in cells throughout the human body, the shorthand
for which is DNA. As is now well known, DNA carries
genetic information which determines the physical
characteristics of the individual. The information comes
in equal measure from each parent. It is the same in all
body fluids and tissues, so, for example, DNA from a
person’s blood will be the same as that found in his or
her saliva and hair roots. Identical twins apart, each
individual’s DNA is unique. In attributing DNA to a
particular individual, however, success will depend, in
part at any rate, on the completeness or otherwise of
the profile obtained. Techniques for recovering genetic
profiles gradually improved throughout the 1990s. Those
employed in 2000 were much more sensitive than were
available in 1995.
108. No doubt
conscious of developments in this area there came a time
in 1995 when the Hanratty family were anxious to apply
DNA testing to such of the exhibits as had survived and
which might show one way or the other whether James
Hanratty had been responsible for the murder of Michael
Gregsten and the rape of Valerie Storie. Attempts made
in March 1995 were unsuccessful. However, in November
1997 after much consultation further DNA analyses were
commissioned this time using highly sensitive DNA
amplification techniques. The test was conducted on the
small remaining piece of fabric from the knickers (part
having been used in the 1995 experiment), a piece of
material from one of the slips and the areas of staining
from the handkerchief. This time the experiment did
produce results in that profiles were obtained both from
the fabric and from the handkerchief which could be
compared with samples taken from James Hanratty’s
brother, Michael, and his mother, Mary. These
comparisons confirmed that the male contribution to the
profiling from the knickers almost certainly came from
either a son of Mary or a brother of Michael. It was
also shown at a much lower level of probability that it
was a son of Mary and a brother of Michael who had been
responsible for depositing the mucus stains on the
handkerchief.
109. Following
the order of the court on 17 October 2000, James
Hanratty’s body was exhumed and samples taken from which
it has been possible for Dr Whitaker of the Forensic
Science Laboratory to state with what a non-scientist
would regard as equivalent to absolute certainty (or
almost absolute certainty as makes no difference) that
the DNA profile recovered from the fragment of knickers
and the DNA profile recovered from the mucus staining on
the handkerchief have come from James Hanratty. That is
not in dispute and, indeed, it is conceded by
Mr Mansfield on behalf of the appellant that, should it
transpire that all possibility of contamination can be
excluded, the DNA evidence points conclusively to James
Hanratty having been both the murderer and the rapist.
Contamination.
110. As was so
clearly explained by Ms Woodroffe, an independent
scientific consultant and a most impressive witness, DNA
may migrate from one surface to another by a variety of
means. Primary transfer is what happens when there is
direct contact between a donor individual and a
recipient individual or surface as might occur during
sexual intercourse. Secondary transfer is what happens
when the DNA is moved via an intermediary as where a
contaminated and an uncontaminated surface are brought
into contact with one another. Then there may be
movement of DNA again via an intermediary where perhaps
the same hand first touches the infected surface and
then another surface which had hitherto been
uncontaminated as might happen where exhibits are
handled without proper precautions in the witness box.
Having said that, usually one can expect a greater
quantity of DNA to be transferred as a result of primary
as opposed to secondary contact. But it is always
necessary to allow for particular circumstances as where
the DNA is dry, as in the case of hair, or wet, as in
the case of seminal fluid. Similarly, regard must be had
to the duration of the contact. Up to the happening of
the crime event, accidental movement of DNA in this way
is referred to as “transfer”; after the crime event as
“contamination”. We are only concerned with the latter,
but for ease of expression we shall use the terms
interchangeably.
111. In this
case it may be helpful first to identify the relevant
exhibits or objects and then to trace their history
through to their first examination in 1995 by which time
it is accepted that there was no longer any risk of
contamination.
112. Quite
clearly the knickers (exhibit 26 at trial) and later the
fragment cut from the crotch area and the handkerchief
(exhibit 35) are of first importance. So too, as
possible contaminators, are James Hanratty’s intimate
samples and items of clothing which may have borne
traces of his DNA.
113. The
knickers arrived at the Metropolitan Police Laboratory (MPL)
on 23 August 1961 where they were examined by Dr
Nickolls, the director and his assistant, Henry Howard.
They were found to be stained with seminal fluid in the
area of the crotch and at the back for five inches
upwards from the crotch. Vaginal fluid from Valerie
Storie was also present. There were smaller quantities
of seminal fluid of blood group AB assumed to have come
at some earlier stage from Michael Gregsten. Although
the laboratory records are not dated, the notes are
numbered sequentially and we are confident that the
knickers were examined almost immediately and in any
event no later than 23 September 1961 when the notes
show that certain samples taken from Peter Alphon were
examined at the laboratory. The handkerchief came to the
laboratory on 25 August, was screened for blood and
semen and, none being found, seems to have been put to
one side.
114. On 7
October 1961 a suitcase containing James Hanratty’s
clothing was seized from the home of his girlfriend,
Louise Anderson. It was received at the laboratory on 9
October. Amongst other items it contained a pair of dark
pinstriped trousers (part of the Hepworth suit) and a
green jacket and trousers. Some hairs and fibres were
removed from the outside of the dark trousers as was a
sample from a seminal stain on the inside of the fly. A
suggestion, which has not been contradicted, is that the
seminal stain may have been washed out and retained in
the form of a liquid. On 13 October, the laboratory
received samples of James Hanratty’s blood and saliva.
It was only at this point that the police became aware
of his blood grouping. The records are incomplete but
there would seem to be no reason for any of James
Hanratty’s items of clothing or for his intimate samples
to be present in the laboratory at the same time as the
knickers or the handkerchief. There is, of course, the
possibility that all the exhibits were stored in the
same place, albeit separately packaged, which, it is
submitted, might have provided the opportunity for
secondary contamination. Dr Nickolls is dead. Mr Howard
is still alive though in poor health. His recollection
is that the dangers of contamination were recognised
even in 1961 and that the practice was to take
elementary precautions such as making sure that clothing
from victim and suspect were not examined on the same
day.
115. All the
exhibits, including those mentioned, were produced at
the committal proceedings which took place between 22
November 1961 and 5 December 1961. If the usual
procedures of the time were followed it would seem
doubtful that any one of the exhibits, barring possibly
the gun and certain of the cartridges, would ever have
been removed from its packaging or container. Even so,
as Mr Mansfield points out and the respondent concedes,
the possibility that there was contact between the
various exhibits cannot be excluded altogether.
116. As a result
of correspondence between James Hanratty’s then
solicitors and the DPP, arrangements were made for the
pathologist, Dr Grant, to have access to James
Hanratty’s intimate samples and also to certain of the
exhibits. It appears from the records that Dr Grant
examined the green jacket and trousers on 28 December
1961 and Valerie Storie’s slips and knickers the
following day. It was on this latter occasion that a
portion of the crotch area of the knickers was removed
and thereafter, as seems clear, stored separately from
the other exhibits including the knickers from which it
had been excised. As also seems clear, a fragment of the
excised portion was retained by the laboratory having
first been placed in a small envelope made of cellophane
and sellotape which was in turn put into a small brown
envelope and the small envelope into a larger envelope
before being treasury tagged to a laboratory file. It
was so placed when rediscovered in 1991.
117. At the
trial which took place between 22 January 1962 and 17
February 1962 all the exhibits with the exception of a
portion of the slip and the fragment of the knickers
referred to previously were produced and in due course,
taken out by the jury on retirement. Thereafter, on 9
April 1962, James Hanratty’s suitcase and clothing were
returned to his father and on 22 May 1962 Valerie
Storie’s slips, her knickers and various samples were
all destroyed.
118. The
handkerchief seems to have remained with the
Bedfordshire Constabulary until September or early
October 1997 when it was discovered in the course of
enquiries made on behalf of the Commission. It was in
the original envelope inside another envelope marked
with the exhibit number ‘35’.
119. The file
containing the fragment from the knickers was discovered
in 1991 by Jennifer Wiles. It was still packaged as
described except that the cellophane package was no
longer intact. Also found in the file were some broken
slides and slide holders possibly having contained hairs
and fibres collected at the scene of the murder. There
were also two polythene bags each containing hairs
thought now to have come from Alphon. There was another
polythene bag containing a number of bullets and
significantly, so Mr Mansfield submits, a polythene bag
containing a small rubber bung and fragments of glass
including a curved piece suggesting that the polythene
bag had at one time contained a glass vial or tube.
120. Mr
Mansfield submits against that background that the
respondent has not been able to exclude the possibility
of contamination. In making that submission, he is
supported by Dr Martin Evison who is a senior lecturer
in Forensic Biological Anthropology in the Department of
Forensic Anthropology at The Medico Legal Centre in
Sheffield and has many academic achievements and
publications to his credit. He told the court that he
had not been able to exclude “the realistic possibility
of contamination”. Dr Evison seems to accept that in the
case of the knicker fragment the contaminant would have
to be semen. That really limits the possibilities to (1)
contact between the knickers and the Hepworth trousers
and (2) contact between the contents of the broken vial
and the fragment held on file. That would mean, so far
as the first possibility is concerned, contact between
the knickers and the fly area of the trousers in the
laboratory, during storage or on production at
committal. The mechanics are difficult to visualise and
we gain the impression that it is neither Mr Mansfield’s
nor Dr Evison’s preferred explanation. Contact could not
take place any later than that because, as we know, Dr
Grant cut out the fragment from the knickers before the
trial took place and the fragment itself was not
exhibited. The second possibility involves a hypothesis
in which the broken vial contained a solution of James
Hanratty’s semen (extracted from the Hepworth trousers)
which upon the vial being broken escaped in such a way
as to invade the insecure packaging in which the fabric
from the knickers was being kept. One of the
respondent’s witnesses, Mr Roger Mann, who has
thirty-two years experience as a forensic scientist,
gave evidence that he has never come across a vial or
tube containing liquid being retained on a file and we
are bound to say that, without having any kind of
scientific experience at all, it would seem a curious
method of storage. Mr Greenhalgh, who saw the file and
examined the fabric in 1995, told us that he considered
the risk of contamination to the fabric to be very low.
We quote from his evidence.
“As I examined the item, the piece of
blue material from the knickers was in a sealed packet
inside the two envelopes. I did not observe any damage
to that packaging which I considered likely to be a risk
of contamination. As far as I was concerned they were
sealed, although the outer envelopes were not sealed
there was no indication of any liquid damage on the
brown paper envelopes, as might have been expected if a
liquid sample had leaked onto them.”
121. That said
we should also record that not one of the respondent’s
witnesses excluded the possibility of contamination.
They have expressed themselves in different ways but the
general tenor of the evidence has been that they each
considered the possibility to be remote. That, of
course, has to be contrasted with the opinion of Dr
Evison who never moved from his original position as
stated in this judgment.
122. As far as
the handkerchief is concerned, it will be remembered
that when first examined it was considered to be of no
scientific interest. No blood or semen was detected.
When John Bark, a forensic scientist working at the
Forensic Science Laboratory in Birmingham, examined the
handkerchief in 1997 he found that:
“The handkerchief appears to be
stained with some body fluid, cellular material which
has bonded strongly to the cotton fabric over a number
of years. There is no microscopic evidence that semen is
present.”
That conclusion
is supported by Roger Mann who subjected the
handkerchief to chemical screening though he
acknowledges the test carried out would not necessarily
detect semen deposited by a male who did not produce
spermatozoa. Realistically, however, it would seem to
follow that the contaminant would have to be something
other than semen and almost certainly liquid in form.
123. The
handkerchief was placed in an open buff OHMS envelope
from which, no doubt, it was produced both at the
committal proceedings and at trial. It was not examined
by Dr Grant. In those circumstances the opportunities
for contamination would seem to be extremely limited.
However, in common with the approach taken in the case
of the knicker fragment, the respondent’s experts are
prepared to accept that there has been, at least, a
theoretical risk of contamination.
124. Making it
quite clear that for the time being we are simply
considering the risk of contamination of a neutral
surface without regard to the DNA profiles which were
eventually obtained, we, too, accept that there was at
least a theoretical possibility of both the knicker
fragment and the handkerchief having been in contact
with a surface bearing DNA contaminants from James
Hanratty.
125. But that is
to ignore the results of the DNA profiling. With regard
to the knicker fragment we have what Dr Whitaker would
describe as a typical distribution of male and female
DNA following an act of sexual intercourse leading to
the obvious inference that the male contribution came
from James Hanratty. For that not to be the case we
would have to suppose that the DNA of the rapist, also
of blood group O, had either degraded so as to become
undetectable or had been masked by James Hanratty’s DNA
during the course of a contaminating event. Moreover, we
would also have to suppose that Valerie Storie’s DNA had
remained in its original state, or at least detectable,
and had escaped being overridden by DNA from James
Hanratty. The same would have to be true of the DNA
attributed to Michael Gregsten. Finally, we must
visualise a pattern which is wholly consistent with
sexual intercourse having taken place in which Valerie
Storie and James Hanratty were the participants.
126. Much the
same reasoning would apply to the handkerchief. The only
DNA extracted from the handkerchief came from James
Hanratty. The only places on the handkerchief from which
his DNA was extracted were the areas of mucus staining.
It is to be expected that whoever was responsible for
the mucus staining would have left evidence of his DNA.
If the explanation for James Hanratty’s DNA being found
on the handkerchief is subsequent contamination it must
follow that either the original DNA had degraded so as
to become undetectable or James Hanratty’s DNA has in
some way overwhelmed the original deposit so that the
original is no longer capable of being traced. More than
that the transfer must have taken place in such a way as
to affect only the areas of mucus staining and not the
unstained part of the handkerchief which was not found
to bear DNA from James Hanratty or anyone else. In our
view the notion that such a thing might have happened in
either case is fanciful. The idea that it might have
happened twice over is beyond belief.
127. Accordingly, we reject the evidence of Dr Evison
where it is in conflict with the additional evidence of
the respondents, agreeing as we do with the submission
made by Mr Sweeney that the DNA evidence standing alone
is certain proof of James Hanratty’s guilt.
THE GROUNDS OF
APPEAL
Valerie Storie
129. The first
four grounds of appeal concern non-disclosure of
material relating to the evidence of Valerie Storie.
Before embarking upon an analysis of these grounds it is
useful to make the following points:
(1) These
questions fall to be judged against the background of
contemporary common law rules, as exemplified by
decisions such as R v Mills and Poole [1998] AC 382 and
R v Ward 96 Cr App R 1, in the light of the analysis of
the proper approach of the court.
(2) The law and
practice relating to disclosure at the time of the trial
differs from what it is today. It is summarised in
Archbold, 35th edn. (1962) as follows:
“Where the prosecution have taken a
statement from a person whom they know can give material
evidence but decide not to call him as a witness, they
are under a duty to make that person available as a
witness for the defence, but they are not under the
further duty of supplying the defence with a copy of the
statement which they have taken: R. v. Bryant & Dickson
(1946) 31 Cr.App.R. 146. … Where a witness whom the
prosecution call or tender gives evidence in the box on
a material issue and the prosecution have in their
possession an earlier statement from that witness
substantially conflicting with such evidence, the
prosecution should, at any rate, inform the defence of
that fact … . In certain cases, particularly where the
discrepancy involves detail, as in identification by
description, it may be difficult effectively to give
such information to the defence without handing to them
a copy of the earlier statement: R. v. Clarke (1930) 22
Cr.App.R. 58.”
130. The four
facts which Mr Mansfield contends should have been
disclosed relating to Valerie Storie are (a) that she
had not been consistent, in her description of the
gunman as having icy blue eyes; (b) her previous
assertion that her opportunity to see the gunman had
been when she was in the back of the car (whereas at
trial she said that her view was when she was still in
the front seat of the car); (c) that, when interviewed,
she had said that her memory of the man was “fading”;
and (d) the fact that the man she identified on the
first parade (on which Peter Alphon appeared) had dark
eyes. We deal with them in turn.
131. As to the
first, Mr Mansfield points to two documents which the
defence were not given (which today they would have
been). The first contains a description given on 23
August, that is the very day on which Valerie Storie was
admitted to hospital, to two police officers who were
doubtless concerned that she might not survive. That
description (as recorded) describes voice, hair, face,
complexion, nose, height, dress and age. As to eyes, it
records “Large, not deep set but face level”. This
interview concluded at 1.30pm and one of the officers
then spoke to Sergeant Absolam who purported to record
what he was told. He included a reference to the eyes as
brown. The next recorded occasion on which Valerie
Storie supplied a description of the gunman was on 26
August to Inspector Mackle (who constructed the
identikit image) when she described the gunman’s eyes as
‘blue’. Thereafter, her written statement of 28 August
and other descriptions refer to ‘icy blue large
saucer-like eyes’ which is a phrase which achieved
prominence in the trial.
132. There is no
doubt that the defence was aware that a man with ‘deep
set brown eyes’ was being sought by the police. The
national press and the Police Gazette of 24 August were
used for the purposes of cross-examination in an attempt
to identify its origin. In fact, there was little room
for challenging Valerie Storie: the best evidence of
what she had first said contains nothing about the
colour of the eyes and, from 26 August 1961, she had
certainly been consistent. In addition, it will be
remembered that at the scene she had attempted to write
blue eyes and brown hair on the ground and as her
veracity was never in dispute this really reduces the
point to no more than a breach of the rules. Further, we
agree with Mr Sweeney’s submission that this material
was of minimal value in the attack on Valerie Storie’s
accuracy compared to the other features carefully placed
before the jury, namely variations between her evidence
at the trial and that given in the committal
proceedings, the difference between her evidence and
that given by John Kerr, the identikit picture which
showed the gunman’s hair as flat and straight and
brushed back from the forehead without a widow’s peak
and, most importantly, the incorrect identification on
24 September 1961. Neither, in all the circumstances, do
we accept that DS Acott’s answer that Valerie Storie had
always been consistent in her description throws doubt
upon his honesty. There is nothing to show this was
anything other than an innocent mistake.
133. The second
ground concerns the same note of the initial discussion
on the day of the killing which records Valerie Storie
as telling the officers:
“I did have a good look at him when I
was in the back of the car when I was trying to soften
him up. I think I would be able to identify him. In fact
I am sure I would.”
This is to be
contrasted with her evidence at the committal and at
trial (and, incidentally, the undisclosed interview of
11 September to which we shall come) that the “only real
proper glimpse” was when she was in the front of the
car, wearing her glasses as a car “came along from
behind and lit up his face”.
134. Mr
Mansfield points not only to the difference between the
front and the back seat but also to the fact that when
on the back seat of the car, which was the time when the
gunman raped her, Valerie Storie could not see clearly
because she was very short-sighted and was not wearing
her glasses. Thus, not being shown this note (which, by
any standard, should have been disclosed) deprived the
defence of the opportunity to throw doubt both on her
ability to have had a clear view of the gunman’s face
and on her reliability and consistency as a witness.
135. There is no
doubt that questions could have been asked about this
discrepancy but the point must be put into context. The
defence did not doubt Valerie Storie’s honesty (nor
could they) and cross-examining her against an account
within 12 hours of the horrific events to which she was
a witness, while she was in hospital gravely ill, is
unlikely to have had any serious impact on anyone’s view
of her reliability. As to consistency, it should be
noted that after referring to the “real proper glimpse”
from the front of the car, the deposition does record
other, albeit less significant, sightings in these
terms:
“When I got in the back of the car
there may have been cars passing. I think there were
some heavy lorries. I only had an opportunity to see a
side view, possibly a three quarters view whilst I was
in the back when any vehicle went past. I can’t really
say how many vehicles went past – not more than about 6
or 8 but I didn’t really count them. Their headlights
would illuminate the man’s face for less than 10
seconds.”
136. The third
ground of appeal concerns the non-disclosure of an
interview with Valerie Storie on 11 September which took
the form of a long series of recorded questions and
answers over nearly five hours and covering 74 typed
sheets. Mr Mansfield points to two features the
non-disclosure of which he contends deprived the defence
of highly significant evidence in relation to Valerie
Storie’s ability to identify the gunman. The first is an
interruption of DS Acott explaining that he intended to
show her photographs when she said “My memory of this
man’s face is fading” to which he responded “Yes but if
you see the face, it will come back to you”. The second
is the photographs to which she was referred and, in
particular, the one photograph which she said was “most
like him”.
137. The first
point to be made is that although this interview would
be disclosable by present standards it is far from clear
that it necessarily fell to be disclosed by the
standards of the day. In fact, the defence knew full
well that Valerie Storie had been interviewed many times
and at length because the first questions asked by Mr
Sherrard at the committal were directed to that issue.
Valerie Storie said:
“I have been interviewed by police
officers on numerous occasions since this dreadful thing
happened. … On one occasion I was interviewed by DS
Acott for a little under 5 hours.”
There is no
suggestion that Mr Sherrard then made, let alone
pressed, an application to see whatever record there
was. This is not a criticism of him but the fact that he
did not may provide insight into the extent to which
this type of material was, on what the law was then
understood to be, then considered disclosable.
138. In any
event, the observation about fading memory has to be
taken in the context of a gravely injured young lady,
traumatised by her experience, concerned to do her best
to help the police to catch the killer and anxious about
her ability to deal with identification. In the same
interview, when shown the identikit picture which she
had helped to compile, she observed that “it is similar
and a good guide to the man I remember so well”. She
later explained that what worried her was that when
confronted with the man “I may not be able to pick him
out”. The fact is that she found her fear unfounded
because she did make a positive identification in the
circumstances described when she was cross-examined
about it (see paragraph 57 above). The care which the
jury had to take was emphasised and we have no doubt
that this feature is of far less significance than the
differences to which we have already referred (paragraph
132).
139. The same
is so for the photographs which she was shown. At its
highest, Valerie Storie identified one as “most like
him”, a phrase utterly subjective in content and of very
little forensic value in the absence of a lengthy
examination of every photograph and the features to
which she was then referring. Given that the photograph
she picked out was apparently of a man with blue eyes
and light brown hair, this point is unlikely to have
advanced the defence case.
140. The fourth
ground of appeal concerns the failure by DS Acott to
disclose a note which he had made in his notebook to the
effect that the man identified by Valerie Storie on the
first identification parade (on which Peter Alphon was
standing) had ‘dark eyes’. A note to that effect was
written in the back of his notebook (that is, not in the
sequence of events that he recorded whether for
evidential purposes or otherwise). Mr Mansfield also
submits that this feature is relevant to the attack on
the Superintendent’s credibility because when asked to
describe the man, the officer only said: “I can tell you
this from my own knowledge: 5ft 9in, dark short cropped
hair, about 27 years of age and he was heavily built”.
Other aspects of the noted description also omitted from
his evidence included ‘long round face, square chin,
pale complexion, … born 7.12.35’.
141. The
notebook would fall to be disclosed under contemporary
common law rules; it is less clear that it represented
an inconsistent statement by 1962 standards. Further, it
would have been open to the defence to require that the
identified man be brought to court. Mr Sherrard asked if
he was available to be brought and was told:
“He was some time ago, but I cannot
say off-hand.”
The officer was
not pressed further.
142. As to DS
Acott’s answer (omitting ‘dark eyes’), it is only fair
to him to record that he was prepared to give a
description (which in the light of his earlier evidence
is likely to have come from his notebook) saying:
“I think I had better give it in
detail from start to finish then.”
He was then
asked whether it was the result of his own observations
and he responded, “Not all of it”. Mr Sherrard, clearly
concerned about what the officer might say, was prepared
to leave the matter but the judge pressed. The answer
upon which Mr Mansfield relies comes after a request
both from Mr Sherrard and the judge to restrict himself
to his own knowledge. Given that the Superintendent had
specifically said that not all of the description came
from his own knowledge and we do not know why this
description was in the back of the notebook, it would be
wrong to conclude that of his own knowledge he could
describe the man’s eyes as ‘dark’.
143. Finally,
the evidence about the man whom Valerie Storie had
identified was not consistent on this point. Dr. Rennie,
who had treated Valerie Storie, was present at this
parade and was asked if he could recall the appearance
of the man whom Valerie Storie had identified. He
stated: “As far as I remember he had rather fairish hair
and bluish eyes”. In our view, there was no great
mileage for the defence in this point. The most
important feature (namely that Valerie Storie had
identified a volunteer on the parade who could not have
been involved) was fully deployed before the jury.
The
Identification Parade
144. The next
two grounds of appeal concern the identification parade.
The fifth ground raises another issue of non-disclosure
which, it is alleged, demonstrates that DS Acott was
aware that the distinctive colour of James Hanratty’s
hair at the time of the identification parades on 13 and
14 October 1961 unfairly placed him at a disadvantage.
145. The facts
can be shortly stated. The officer caused a message to
be sent on 12 October concerning the arrangements for
the identification parades. This reveals that he advised
that skull-caps should be obtained to be worn by the
parade participants and suggested those worn in
operating theatres. In the event, the advice was not
followed by the Bedfordshire officers who arranged the
first parade on 13 October or the Buckinghamshire
officers who arranged the parade attended by Valerie
Storie in her bed at Stoke Mandeville Hospital on the
following day. It is worth adding that this message
would not have fallen to be disclosed in 1962 albeit
that it now would be.
146. It is clear
from the brief particulars of all the members of the
second parade that men were chosen with hair variously
described as fair, auburn, brown and ginger. There is no
doubt that James Hanratty’s hair was different. On
3 October or thereabouts the appellant had his hair dyed
a deep auburn colour and by the time of the parade it
was a vividly unnatural colour. In her deposition
Valerie Storie said of the identification parade:
“I was startled by the most unusual
colour of the hair of the accused. I had never seen hair
quite that colour before.”
At the trial she
agreed with Mr Sherrard’s suggestion that the appellant
stood out like “a carrot in a bunch of bananas”.
147. It is far
from clear that DS Acott was concerned that the parade
would be unfair to James Hanratty; his instruction is
equally consistent with a concern that his hair might be
off-putting to an identifying witness who would be sure
that the killer (seen by Valerie Storie) and the driver
(seen by John Skillett, Edward Blackhall and James
Trower) did not have hair of the colour of James
Hanratty. In any event, DS Acott’s view is not to the
point. The parades were organised by independent
officers charged to ensure that every precaution is
taken to eliminate unfairness as described in the Home
Office guidance then governing the procedure. It was
conducted in the presence of James Hanratty’s solicitor
who made no complaint at the time and the fairness of
the parade was fully explored at the trial.
148. The sixth
ground of appeal relates to Valerie Storie’s request to
hear the members of the parade speak and criticises the
fact that she was allowed to do so based on H.O.
Circular 109/1978 (which was promulgated many years
after this case had concluded). We have referred to her
evidence as to her state of mind (see paragraphs 56 and
57) and, notwithstanding answers provided in
re-examination to the effect that absolute certainty
came after she had heard the men speak, she had
previously made it clear that she was satisfied after
five minutes. Thus, if asked whether she could identify
the man on the basis of appearance in accordance with
the circular, it seems clear that she would have replied
in the affirmative because she was making her request to
enable her to confirm the preliminary identification she
had already made. So hearing James Hanratty’s voice went
to confirm her view and was, in a way, a protection
against her selecting the wrong person. Thus,
non-compliance with the circular is of very limited
significance.
149. Furthermore, if Valerie Storie had been depending
only upon voice identification, then not to have on the
parade volunteers who had a similar accent to James
Hanratty would have been a mistake. Valerie Storie was
looking for the right appearance and then the right
voice, and this being the position the criticism of not
selecting those on the parade from the point of view of
their voices loses considerable force. In the
circumstances of this case, we do not believe that the
questions asked on the parade caused any unfairness. We
return to the absence of direction when dealing with the
summing up.
150. Having
completed the review of all the grounds affecting
Valerie Storie, one further point ought to be made.
Although we have set out our views as to the impact of
these various non-disclosures, neither that nor the
conclusion that we have reached about the DNA evidence
(which necessarily has the effect that Valerie Storie’s
identification was, in fact, entirely accurate) is
decisive of these grounds of appeal. The fact is that by
contemporary standards all this material should have
been available to the defence and, even by the standards
of the day, at least a large part should have been. We
shall return to the overall effect of these failures in
the context of the fairness of the trial as a whole
having analysed the other complaints.
Identification
of the Driver of the Morris Minor
151. One of the
important planks of the prosecution case was the
identification of James Hanratty by John Skillett and
James Trower, the drivers who had seen a Morris Minor
being driven erratically along Eastern Avenue in the
direction of Gants Hill and near Avondale Crescent at or
around 7am on 23 August. With the evidence of Doris
Athoe that the car found by the police later that day
(which was the car Michael Gregsten had been driving)
was in Avondale Crescent from about 7am, there was a
direct link through the car between the killing and
James Hanratty.
152. The seventh
ground of appeal concerns the fact that (not disclosed
to the defence) there were other reported sightings of
the Morris Minor car during 23 August 1961 in different
parts of the country and evidence that a different light
grey Morris Minor had been parked directly opposite
where Mr Gregsten’s car was recovered. This evidence
consists of the following:
i) At 6.30am on Wednesday 23 August,
William Lee saw a grey Morris Minor being driven by a
man wearing a woollen pom-pom hat on the A6 near Matlock
in Derbyshire. He wrote the registration number down as
847 BHN which was the registration of Michael Gregsten’s
car in the boot of which there was such a hat (although
there is no evidence that the murderer otherwise was
seen wearing it).
ii) At 12 midday on the same day,
John Douglas, a petrol pump attendant at a garage at
Birstall, north of Leicester, made a mental note of the
registration number of a bluish grey car as 847 BHN
occupied by a man and a woman. The man spoke with a
southern accent which sounded to him as coming from
Somerset.
iii) Other sightings of a car with
the registration number 847 BHN were noted at 1.00pm
between Hitchin and St. Ippollits (which would mean that
the car stayed in the vicinity of Bedford all morning)
and at 5.25pm in Coventry (which given the time the car
was seen by the police in Avondale Crescent is simply
not possible).
iv) Doreen Milne said she parked her
grey Morris Minor in Avondale Crescent at 8.15am
opposite where Michael Gregsten’s car was subsequently
found without recalling any car parked opposite hers.
Margaret Thompson saw police interest around what she
called a grey Morris 1000 at 8.00pm and reported that it
had not been there at 5.30pm when she passed with her
three year-old son.
Needless to say, the sightings in
Matlock, Coventry and north of Leicester are
inconsistent with the Morris Minor being seen in Eastern
Avenue, near Avondale Crescent, or in Avondale Crescent
by 7am although it is somewhat difficult to visualise
for what purpose the gunman might have made these trips
and then returned to Ilford (as he must have done) using
a car which he would have known the police would be
seeking as soon as Michael Gregsten was identified and
the car he was driving ascertained.
153. There is no
doubt at all that this material would fall to be
disclosed by contemporary standards: the contrary is not
suggested. In our judgment the names and addresses of
these witnesses also fell to be disclosed under the more
restrictive regime described in R v Bryant & Dickson. We
are not in a position to say why that did not occur
although DS Acott may have discounted these
identifications, at least in part, because of other
material which was also not disclosed (and about which
the appellant also complains).
154. Unknown to
the defence at the trial was the fact that a record was
kept by Michael Gregsten of the mileage when he put
petrol in the car. On 22 August 1961, the odometer was
recorded as 51,875 miles. When the vehicle was recovered
in Avondale Crescent, the police noted the odometer
reading to be 52,107 miles. Thus, 232 miles had been
travelled in the period which elapsed. Depending on when
petrol was put in the car, this may have included
Michael Gregsten’s driving that day (57.4 miles) but
must include the drive from the cornfield at Dorney
Reach to Deadman’s Hill on the A6 (58-65 miles) and, at
the very least, the minimum distance from the A6 to
Avondale Crescent, Ilford (48.6 miles). We say ‘at the
very least’ because there is, of course, no direct
evidence of where the gunman went having left Valerie
Storie for dead on the A6 and neither do we know that,
in any event, he took what present investigation reveals
would then have been the shortest route. These distances
are comfortably within the distance which, if the record
is correct, the odometer recorded.
155. The most
impressive evidence of sighting must surely be that of
Mr Lee in Matlock. The straight-line distance from
Deadman’s Hill to Matlock and then to Redbridge is
estimated at 268 miles. That itself exceeds the 232
miles record and takes no account of the trip from
Dorney Reach to Deadman’s Hill. A route planner puts
that total distance as 333.3 miles. Thus, if the
odometer readings are correct, this identification must
also be flawed. Mr Sweeney makes the same point about
the identification north of Leicester.
156. In any
event, Mr Sweeney argued that this evidence would not
have been utilised by the defence who were arguing that
the presence of the cartridges found at the Vienna Hotel
was explicable on the basis of the involvement of Peter
Alphon who had been seen at the hotel during the morning
of Wednesday and so could not have been driving the car
around the country. Whether Mr Sherrard would have
changed his strategy, however, or at least tested the
evidence rather differently (bearing in mind that Mrs
Athoe’s account was read to the jury and thus not put in
issue at all) is one which we are simply not in a
position to determine and neither should we.
157. Having said
that, none of this evidence was without its difficulties
for the defence and although this represents the high
watermark of non-disclosure in this case we do not
consider that, on its own, this feature reveals such
fatal unfairness as itself to render the conviction
unsafe. We return below to the question of the impact of
this material, taken with the other complaints about the
trial, and in the context of the DNA evidence, upon the
overall safety of the conviction.
Concealment of the Gun
158. The 36A bus
route ran from Rye Lane Depot in New Cross to Victoria,
Hyde Park Corner, Marble Arch, Edgware Road, Maida Vale
and West Kilburn. It passed Sussex Gardens (the home of
James Hanratty’s friend with whom he occasionally
stayed) and Sutherland Avenue (the location of the
Vienna Hotel). On the morning of 24 August (ie over 24
hours after the killing), Pamela Patt was the bus
conductress. After the gun was found that evening, she
made a statement describing one unknown passenger going
to the top deck of the bus. The eleventh ground of
appeal is that neither her statement nor her name and
address were disclosed. We proceed on the basis of a
failure to comply with contemporary standards of
disclosure and the relevant standards of the time.
159. The gun was
found under the back seat on the top deck of the 36A bus
on the night of 24 August by a cleaner, Edwin Cooke. He
had cleaned the bus the previous evening and said that
it had not been there then. Because James Hanratty had
sent a telegram from Liverpool to London at 20.40 on 24
August, it was the prosecution case that he had
deposited the gun during the early morning run on 24
August when Arthur Embleton was the driver. He referred
to being accompanied by woman conductor Patt.
160. Pamela
Patt’s statement (taken on 26 August 1961) was to the
effect that the passengers during the northern part of
the journey to West Kilburn were all regulars, with one
exception. At 6.10am a young man of dirty appearance,
wearing a dirty raincoat got on near the Grosvenor Hotel
and went to the upper deck, where he was the only
passenger for a time. On the return journey the bus was
full between Harrow Road and Victoria. When giving
evidence, DS Acott agreed that there would have to have
been nobody sitting on the back seat of the bus for it
to have been lifted sufficiently to allow the gun to be
deposited. He also agreed that the murder weapon and the
boxes of cartridges were bulky items.
161. Mrs Patt
was due to appear at the committal proceedings, but was
unwell. The prosecution must, therefore, have considered
her evidence probative but did not serve it as
additional evidence. Mr Mansfield argued that it was
significant because, according to her, the only person
who would have had an opportunity to deposit the gun and
cartridges was the man whom she described and whose
description was not consistent with that of James
Hanratty. Had the defence been provided with her
statement, he suggests that steps could have been taken
to find out if she recognised the appellant as the
person she observed (notwithstanding the fact that by
seeking to call her at the committal, the prosecution
most certainly did not believe that she undermined their
case).
162. By the
standards of the time (which would have required
disclosure of name and address only), the defence had
the relevant information in the statement of Arthur
Embleton (with the result that if they had wished to
trace her, it would not have been a difficult exercise).
In any event, her description of the man (about 25, 5
ft. 7 ins., medium build, thick wavy hair, mousey
colour, clean shaven) is unlikely to have taken the
defence very far and it would have been remarkable had
they sought to call this witness to make a positive non
identification and risk her cross-examination on the
various features of similarity. We nevertheless refer
below to the effect of this failure by the prosecution.
164. As we
outlined at paragraph 35 above, it was not revealed that
enquiries had been directed to the Vienna Hotel, not
because of the recovery of the cartridges but because of
the behaviour of Peter Alphon at another hotel, as a
result of which he was interviewed on 27 August, when he
asserted that he had stayed at the Vienna Hotel on the
night of 22/23 August. It was this claim to an alibi
that led to the original statements. Other statements to
do with the register were also not disclosed although it
was clear from the cross-examination of DS Acott that
because of questions Mr Sherrard put, he was aware that
Juliana Galves had changed her evidence about the
occupation of the room subsequent to 21/22 August.
165. Also
undisclosed at the time of the trial was a police log,
dated 6 September 1961, which recorded a message
confirming that Peter Alphon (using the name F. Durrant)
had stayed at the Vienna Hotel arriving at 11.30pm on 22
August. The message goes on “Statement will be
forwarded”. The box “Action taken” has then been
completed:
“Please make perfectly sure that it
is a positive fact that Durrant was in the hotel at
11.30 p.m. on 22nd August 1961 – Include this in the
statement please.”
There is then (presumably written by
a different person) “Will be done!!”.
166. A statement
to that effect (albeit later modified by the witness)
was taken. Mr Mansfield submits that this is evidence of
police malpractice, as was the failure to disclose
statements and the log (which would only be by
contemporary standards and not those appertaining at the
time). Mr Mansfield argues further, that it is
legitimate to infer that the hotel register had been
altered to conceal the entry in relation to Ryan and
that the defence were deprived of the opportunity to
submit that the police were prepared to tailor the
evidence to fit the theory that Durrant/Alphon was
guilty, that someone with knowledge that Alphon was
under investigation had planted the cartridge cases; and
that the hotel record had been altered in some way.
167. Whereas
there was a failure to disclose material to which we
shall have to return, we do not accept that the events
bear this construction, or give rise to the possibility
of that type of submission. The police log does no more
than underline the importance to whoever was charged
with taking a statement that it should cover the time of
his arrival at the hotel. Far from implicating Peter
Alphon, the effect of the requested statement would
exonerate him at a time when there was no other suspect.
There was no reason for anyone to alter the hotel
register. Finally, this material provides no support for
the proposition that anyone (let alone the police who
had the gun and the ammunition from 24 August) planted
the cartridges. They were, after all, found at a time
before James Hanratty had entered the frame of possible
suspects but when Alphon, according to the message
recorded on the log of 6 September, appeared to have an
alibi and so was about to leave it. The circumstances in
which they were found (and the discrepancies involved)
were fully ventilated at the trial.
168. The next
ground of appeal concerning the Vienna Hotel relates to
undisclosed inconsistent interviews of William Nudds and
Florence Snell (although inconsistent statements were
disclosed and were the subject of detailed
cross-examination at the trial). Mr Mansfield argues
that this failure deprived the defence of material
affecting the credibility of two important prosecution
witnesses.
169. These
inconsistencies go to the time at which these witnesses
saw Peter Alphon at the Vienna Hotel and whether, in
fact, they provided him with an alibi for the killing
and would have provided additional ammunition with which
to damage their credibility although the prosecution,
the defence and the Judge all warned the jury about the
care needed in relation to what they said. In that
context, it is worth adding that there is, in fact, no
evidence that Peter Alphon was in any way involved (and
it was common ground that the DNA findings are
inconsistent with his being the murderer/rapist).
170. The only
other evidence given or confirmed by these witnesses
upon which Mr Mansfield relies as demonstrating
unfairness in the trial is the account, which is
disputed of how, when James Hanratty left the hotel, he
asked for directions to Queensway and was advised by
William Nudds (partly corroborated by Florence Snell) to
walk to Harrow Road and catch a 36 bus. We do not
consider that this evidence, even if accepted, took the
prosecution anywhere. This request, if made, was on the
morning of 22 August, that is before the killing, and
provides no link with a trip on a 36A bus to abandon the
gun and ammunition. On the prosecution evidence, this
was two days later on the morning of 24 August.
171. The final
ground of appeal concerning the Vienna Hotel relates to
the date when the hotel register was seized by the
police and the failure to disclose a note in DS Acott’s
notebook to the effect that he did so on 20 September.
Mr Mansfield argues that DS Acott’s evidence to the jury
(that he did so on 11 September when the cartridges were
found) was thus untrue, thus raising further doubts
about his credibility and about the integrity of the
evidence in relation to the finding of the cartridge
cases.
172. In 1962,
there would have been no question within the current
rules of prior disclosure of the notebook although had
the officer used it to refresh his memory while giving
evidence, Mr Sherrard would have been entitled to see
it. Under present rules, it would fall to be disclosed.
In fact, however, there was evidence in the form of a
statement from DSgt Oxford to the effect that the
register was seized on 20 September (which militates
against the Superintendent deliberately lying as Mr
Mansfield implies). The fact is that James Hanratty
agreed that he stayed at the Vienna Hotel on the night
of 21/22 August and there would be no reason, after the
finding of the cartridges, for the hotel register to be
forged by anyone.
173. More
significantly, we do not accept that this material
impugns the integrity of the evidence relating to the
cartridge cases in any way. We have already referred to
the state of the investigation at the time that they
were said to have been found. The police had the gun;
they had no reason to look further at Peter Alphon or
the Vienna Hotel, let alone think about James Hanratty.
Whatever coincidence this was, there is nothing in this
error to support any theory of fabrication or plant.
Interviews and
the ESDA Evidence
174. After the
appellant had been arrested in Blackpool on 11 October
1961, the following day DS Acott and DSgt Oxford
interviewed him. During two interviews DS Acott asked
the questions while DSgt Oxford made notes of the
questions and the appellant’s answers. The notes were
recorded on a bundle of loose foolscap size pieces of
paper. The notes indicated that the first interview
began at 7.45am and finished at 9.30am, and that the
second interview began at 2.15pm and concluded at
2.45pm. The notes also record that they were read and
checked by DS Acott in the presence of DSgt Oxford, in
the case of the morning interview, at 11am and, in the
case of the afternoon interview, at 4.30pm. The notes
extended over 20 pages. The two officers jointly
corrected and initialled the notes. The notes were
subsequently reproduced in the officers’ respective
notebooks.
175. During the
trial both police officers were cross-examined as to the
manner in which the notes had been recorded. For
example, DS Acott denied the suggestion that he had
altered his notebook and DSgt Oxford refuted the
suggestion that the notes were not honestly recorded.
The point was made that the appellant was not given an
opportunity to confirm the accuracy of the notes.
However, it was not suggested that there were major
differences between what is recorded and what was
actually said.
176. On the
hearing of the appeal, Mr Mansfield primarily directed
his criticism of what is recorded as having been said by
the appellant at the end of both interviews using the
word “kip”. At the first interview he is recorded as
saying “OK I’ll go to ‘kip’” and at the second interview
he is recorded as saying “I’m going to have a good
‘kip’” and “No, I’m not tired but I can always ‘kip’ any
time and place”.
177. Mr
Mansfield directed his attention to the use of the word
“kip” because Valerie Storie recalled the murderer using
the word “kip”, and because the use of that word was
relied upon by the prosecution to identify the appellant
as the murderer (see paragraph 20 above). The appellant
gave evidence that he was not in the habit of using the
word ‘kip, and that he did not use the word ‘kip’ during
the interviews.
178. After the
trial, evidence was obtained from an expert in forensic
document examination, Dr David Baxendale, that certain
parts of the notes had been rewritten. He was able to
give this evidence because he subjected the notes which
had been produced at the trial, as exhibit 117, to an
ESDA test. An ESDA test reveals whether a document has
been written when positioned over another document by
enabling the indentations in the lower document which
such writing can cause to be visible to the naked eye.
This feature is the basis of the twelfth ground of
appeal.
179. Dr
Baxendale gave evidence before us on this appeal. He
explained that you could expect, if someone was writing
on a pad of pages that the impressions made by writing
on the first page could be detected on the second page
and so on. So here, by using ESDA, he found that page 2
reveals the impressions from the handwriting on page 1
and page 3 bears the impression of the handwriting on
page 2. However, Dr Baxendale was not able to detect any
impressions from page 3 on page 4. Instead he detected
on page 4 some faint impressions which came from page
20. On page 5 more than one set of impressions were
identified but the only feature of significance were
impressions which suggested that there was more than one
previous page 4. The differing impressions on page 15
established that there had been more than one version of
page 15. The same was true of page 19. Dr Baxendale was
of the opinion that pages 4, 15 and 19 in exhibit 117
had been rewritten. In addition, that page 4 in exhibit
117 had been under page 20 at the time that that page
was written. Otherwise his findings on the different
pages were generally in accordance with what you would
expect if the notes had been recorded in a
straightforward manner and no second copies made.
180. We accept
Dr Baxendale’s evidence, but we do not consider that his
evidence establishes that it is probable there was
anything improper about the manner in which the notes
were recorded. Taking fully into account the evidence of
the two officers at the trial, it is our opinion that
there could well be a wholly innocent explanation for Dr
Baxendale’s findings. What we regard as significant is
that Dr Baxendale found no evidence that anything had
been added or removed from the notes in the course of
pages being rewritten. This does not rule out
alterations but it does suggest that while the copying
was being done, material changes to the content of the
notes were not being made. The impressions which were
found of what was on the missing pages do not always
follow the same pattern as that on the pages
constituting exhibit 117. This could be due to the
position of the page underneath not being precisely the
same as that of the page above at the time when the
writing took place, or it could be an incidental
consequence of the copying process.
181. For the
officers to have deliberately inserted the word “kip”
into the notes without it being used by the appellant
would have been serious misconduct. However, it was
misconduct which could equally have been achieved
without rewriting the pages of the notes and it is not
obvious if this was what was wanted why it could not
have been more simply and less laboriously achieved.
182. The
impressions, which Dr Baxendale found, were from the
upper half of the page. This is apparently not unusual.
What the notes confirm is that during the course of the
interview, there were substantial pauses. While this is
speculation, a possible explanation for the findings was
that DSgt Oxford was taking advantage of the pauses to
rewrite more clearly what he had previously written. It
has to be remembered that it was only the pages, which
were agreed and authenticated by the two officers, which
were reproduced in their notebooks. The position may not
even be different today, but, it is our belief that at
the date of the interviews importance would not have
been attached to the rewriting (as long as this was done
in the same terms) of the notes taken in the course of
an interview prior to the notes being reproduced, in
accordance with the then practice, in the officers
notebooks.
183. If at the
trial the defence had been aware of the rewriting, then
no doubt this would have been explored in
cross-examination. However, it is unlikely that this
would have been a matter of any significance since it
was accepted by DS Acott that nothing said by the
appellant could be considered a confession. We do not
accept that Dr Baxendale’s evidence demonstrates, as is
suggested in the perfected grounds of appeal, that the
evidence given at the trial by each officer was, at
least in part, untrue.
184. Reduced to
its proper significance this ground of appeal is of
peripheral, if any significance.
The Rhyl Alibi
185. Mr Mansfield does not advance any attack on the
conduct of the prosecution in relation to that part of
James Hanratty’s alibi which concerned his departure
from London and his arrival and initial movements in
Liverpool. The jury heard evidence about the train times
from London Euston to Liverpool Lime Street (12.15pm
arriving 4.45pm) and it was for them to evaluate the
evidence of Olive Dinwoodie and Albert Harding as to the
incident in the sweet shop.
186. Following
Mr Sherrard’s opening speech to the effect that James
Hanratty had left Liverpool by bus on the same day that
he arrived and gone to Rhyl, it is not surprising that
the police commenced enquiries. By the end of the day on
which the speech was made, they had obtained details by
telex of the bus service from Liverpool to Rhyl. This
showed there was a double-decker bus, which departed at
6pm and arrived at 8.19pm. The appellant asserts that
this information was not disclosed; in common with
other, similar, claims, the prosecution invites the
Court to proceed on the basis that this is correct.
187. Although
there is no doubt that under modern common law rules,
this material should have been disclosed, it is arguable
whether the information (not in the form of a statement
from a person whom the prosecution know can give
material evidence) fell for disclosure at the time. To
the initiated, it must have been clear that Mr Swanwick
had been given information on this topic for he
cross-examined as to the name of the carrier, whether it
was a single-decker or a double-decker, and its colour.
188. Whatever is
the true position, we do not consider that this failure
is of significance in itself or adds anything to the
other allegations where breach of the rules is
established. Furthermore, emphasis of the timing serves
to underline the little time available to James Hanratty
while he was in Liverpool. Thus, in the 75 minutes
between the arrival of the train and the departure of
the bus, his evidence was that he has left the train,
had a wash in the station, deposited property in the
left-luggage office, made enquiries outside the station
about Carleton, Tarleton or Talbot Road, got on and off
a bus, gone to the sweet shop in Scotland Road, walked
back to Lime Street, looked for but been unable to find
the road, gone for a meal, discussed the sale of a
watch, decided to go to Rhyl, presumably collected what
he had left at the left luggage office, found the bus
station and got on the bus. It was his evidence, of
course, that he only left Liverpool at 7.30pm.
189. The real
issue under this thirteenth ground of appeal concerns
three other witnesses which the investigation of the
Rhyl alibi revealed. These are Margaret Walker, Ivy
Vincent, and Christopher Larman. First, on 8 February
1962, a statement was taken by police from Mrs Walker.
She said that she lived in South Kinmel Street and that
one night during the third week of August 1961 at
between 7.30pm and 8.00pm (when it was dark), she was
standing by the gate of her home, when a young man
wearing a dark suit aged between 24 and 27 years-old
asked if she could put him up for a night or two nights.
She noticed that he had dark hair ‘but streaky, funny,
not all the same colour’. She had no room, but referred
him across the way to Mrs Vincent.
190. In
accordance with the practice at the time, this statement
was not disclosed to James Hanratty or his advisers,
although her name and address were. Unfortunately,
neither files of the correspondence between the Director
of Public Prosecutions and James Hanratty’s solicitor
have survived the passage of time but a letter dated 19
February 1962 (which would have been the Monday
following conviction on the Saturday) from enquiry
agents to the solicitors makes it clear:
“Mrs Walker was one of the persons
out of the six, supplied to you by the D.P.P.’s Dept.
She had gone to the police and made a statement. When
seen by us she was not definite in anything but gave the
impression she wanted to be in on it.”
For our part,
the only proper conclusion to draw is that her name and
address had been provided before the end of the trial.
191. Mr Mansfield acknowledges the strength of that
inference and further accepts that early interview of
Mrs Walker would have led to Mrs Vincent (whom
Mrs Walker mentions). The same is not so in relation to
Christopher Larman who came to the attention of the
police as late as 15 February (after the summing up had
started but before the jury retired on 17 February). At
8.15pm, a Detective Sergeant in Staines reported a
message he had received apparently from “Mrs Christopher
Edward Larman” (although the telephone subscriber at the
given address was Mrs Margaret Smith. The name provided
may be a typing error for Mr Larman) to the effect that
he was in Rhyl on 22 August 1961 when a man asked if he
could find him digs; he directed him to a house opposite
the Windsor Hotel. He described him as “a man in his
30s, 5 ft. 5½ ins, hair bronze or black, the sun was
shining on it and I could not see the colour properly”.
The message was passed to DS Acott and was annotated:
‘Copy of message handed to Det Supt.
Acott at 9.10pm 15/2/62 on the instructions of D.Supt.
Barron. Det. Supt. Acott said he would see that the
information was handed to the defending counsel in the
morning’.
192. Mr Sherrard
QC has written to the appellant’s solicitor about this
note in these terms:
“I am morally certain that no such
information either oral or written was conveyed to me at
the trial. 16 February 1962 was a Friday and the Judge
was summing up. Had this statement or anything like it
been brought to my attention, even at that stage, I
would surely have asked the Judge to give me a little
time to consider the implications of some information
which had been provided to me. The transcript will show
that at no stage did I make such an application.
I am quite sure that if there had
been need to communicate information of this kind to me,
it would have been done by prosecuting counsel. I am
sure that this did not happen with regard to the Larman
material.”
We have no
hesitation in accepting Mr Sherrard’s recollection which
is entirely consistent with the careful way in which he
marshalled material during the trial. Equally, we do not
doubt that prosecuting counsel would have acted in
accordance with their duty. Unfortunately, DS Acott is
now dead and cannot be asked specifically with the
result that we do not know precisely what went wrong.
193. A
full statement was taken from Christopher Larman by the
police on 16 February. The statement is to the effect
that at approximately 7.15pm on 22 August, he left a
hotel on the corner of Kinmel St., when he was
approached by a man aged in his late twenties, wearing a
dark suit who asked him if he knew a place where he
could get bed and breakfast. Mr Larman pointed him
towards Ingledene. Although he described the man’s hair
as black observing ‘but as he walked away from me with
the sun shining on it, his hair had a bronze effect in
parts of it’, he also made it clear that he would not be
able to recognise the man if he saw him again.
194. Neither
this statement, nor Mr Larman’s name and address, were
disclosed to the defence team by the prosecution.
Mr Mansfield submits that it may be inferred that it was
deliberately suppressed by DS Acott. He goes on to argue
that had the statement of Mrs Walker been disclosed to
James Hanratty before the conclusion of the defence case
at trial, then she could have been available to give
evidence at the appropriate time. A statement could also
have obtained a statement from Mrs Vincent, who was
named in Mrs Walker’s statement. Had Mr Larman’s
statement been served, then an application could have
been made to the trial judge to allow this evidence to
be given before the jury retired notwithstanding the
fact that the time for calling evidence had passed. In
that regard, the prosecution accept that Gorman J,
anxious to be as fair as possible to the man on trial,
would certainly have allowed time for such an
application to be considered. Mr Mansfield concludes
that the non-disclosure of this and the other statement
itself deprived James Hanratty of the opportunity to
call important evidence and so deprived him of a fair
trial.
195. That the
failure to disclose represents a breach of standards is
clear but before considering the effect of such a
failure, it is important to record what happened after
the conviction. Statements were, in fact, obtained by
James Hanratty’s legal advisers from these witnesses. On
19 February, Mrs Walker provided a statement to the
effect that she had been approached at about 7.30pm by a
man in a dark suit asking for somewhere to stay. She was
shown photographs of the appellant and stated: ‘The
photographs you have shown to me are very like the man
who called here, but the hair was dark.’ She repeated
what she had told the police that the man’s hair ‘was
not quite natural, as though it was streaky or tacky.’
As to the date, she stated “It was definitely the
Tuesday before the 25 August, because I had some
personal news of something that was to happen on the
Friday”.
196. On the same
day, a statement was taken from Mrs Ivy Vincent. She
stated that about the third week in August there was an
occasion when a man had approached her, having come from
Mrs Walker’s house, and asked if she had any vacancies.
She said that she did not and suggested that he try
further up South Kinmel Street and, failing that, that
he try Kinmel Street. She stated that she had seen the
appellant’s photograph in the paper and “I seem to
recognise his face”.
197. Finally, on
21 February a statement was taken from Christopher
Larman. Although the account which he provided was
broadly similar to that given to the police, namely that
he had spoken to the man at about 7.30pm on 22 August
1961, there was one very significant difference. Whereas
to the police he had made it clear that he would not be
able to recognise the man again, in this statement, he
said:
“On Sunday, 18th February 1962, I
saw photographs in the Sunday Papers of James Hanratty
and I immediately remembered that I had seen him before
and also the occasion when and where I had … I
particularly remember this man because of his hair,
which was most outstanding being brown and dark in
parts…The photographs I have been shown are definitely
of the man I saw and spoke to at about 7.30 p.m. on
Tuesday 22nd August 1961.”
198. It follows
that statements from each of these witnesses were in the
possession of James Hanratty’s legal advisers well
before the 13 March 1962 when the matter came before the
Court of Criminal Appeal. Following an article clearly
critical of the way in which James Hanratty had been
defended, in a letter to the Sunday Times dated 30
September 1968, his solicitor, without divulging matters
covered by professional privilege, explained the reason
for the decision not to seek to call that evidence
before the court on the basis that the statements were
not consistent with the evidence which James Hanratty
had given. He went on:
“Quite apart from inconsistencies as
to identification and detail (as well as some mutually
contradictory features) there was no point in seeking to
rely on the evidence of Mr Larman, Mrs Walker and
Mrs Vincent because their statements (even without the
test of cross-examination) did not match Hanratty’s
evidence on the crucial issue of time. He could not have
spoken to any of these people at 7.30 p.m. because his
evidence on oath was that he did not leave Liverpool by
coach for Rhyl until after 7.30 p.m. and that when he
arrived at Rhyl it was late evening and dark. It was, of
course, not dark at Rhyl at 7.30 p.m. That the
statements in other respects did not find support from
Hanratty himself added substantially to the
difficulties.”
In his letter, Mr Sherrard added
that, after the trial, he did see statements of Mr Larman
and other potential witnesses which were considered for
the purposes of appeal. He goes on to add that he need
not rehearse the reasons for not seeking to adduce any
of this evidence at the appeal.
199. Mr Mansfield challenges the solicitor’s reasoning
in his letter pointing to the consistency of description
(with two commenting on the unusual hair consistent with
the evidence regarding the use of dye), recognition of
photograph, the fact that two had reasons to fix the
date and James Hanratty’s evidence that he had enquired
“on five or six occasions” about bed and breakfast
accommodation. He argues that witnesses are notoriously
unreliable about time and that had the legal team known
of the bus time table, they would have appreciated that
James Hanratty would have arrived in Rhyl at 8.19pm
(sunset being 8.30pm according to the information
supplied by Mr Swanwick from his diary during
cross-examination) so that the timing was not as awry as
might have been thought. In the circumstances, he
submits that the court should receive the evidence of
the three witnesses under section 23 Criminal Appeal Act
1968 on the grounds that it is expedient in the
interests of justice.
200. Implicit in
this submission is a criticism of the failure to seek to
call the evidence before the Court of Criminal Appeal by
which time, after all, there was nothing to be lost in
pursuing every possible point. We have no doubt that
most anxious thought was given to this line. It is
unlikely that the times of buses were unknown to the
defence team (given that it is clear they had made their
own enquiries about train times); a consequence of
emphasising the 6.00pm departure is to underline the
extent of James Hanratty’s necessary activity in the
preceding 1¼ hours. Further, two of the witnesses speak
specifically about 7.30pm whereas James Hanratty could
not have arrived in Rhyl until 8.19pm and his evidence
was that he found it very hard to find accommodation,
that he had travelled in and out through other streets
and it was dark at the time when he came upon a small
private house with the ‘Bed and Breakfast’ sign. Time
discrepancies are one thing; differences between light
and dark, another. Finally, the solicitor’s observation
that “the statements in other respects did not find
support from Hanratty” cannot be ignored; his reasons
are unknown although his instructions, in the end, would
be conclusive. In the circumstances, we do not criticise
the decision not to seek to call this evidence before
the Court of Criminal Appeal.
201. If that
decision was legitimate, it is almost inconceivable that
a different view would have been taken had this material
been available before the Judge concluded his summing
up. At that time, the verdict was still in the future.
Seeking to call further evidence carries real risks and
if there was appropriate concern about whether it should
be called at the appellate level, that concern would
have been much greater at the trial. In the
circumstances, we do not accept that the failure to
disclose such material as the police had in relation to
Rhyl would have made any difference to the way in which
the trial was conducted.
202. As to the
application under section 23 Criminal Appeal Act 1968
now to rely upon the same evidence (which goes to the
question of the identity of the killer), the DNA
evidence to which we have referred leads conclusively to
the view that this material does not render the verdict
unsafe.
The Summing Up
Identification
203. We now come
to the summing up and the fourteenth and fifteenth
grounds of appeal. While Mr Mansfield accepts that in
general the summing up was of high quality and very fair
measured by the standards of 1962, it is equally not in
dispute that by today’s standards the summing up would
be regarded as defective. This is particularly true of
the manner in which the judge dealt with the critically
important issue of identification.
204. The
decision in Turnbull [1976] 63 Cr App R 132 which
increased the scale of the warnings which were to be
included in a summing up as to identification had not
yet been decided. In any event this case required a
particularly careful and full direction as to
identification. This is because Valerie Storie, in
making her identification, relied at least in part on
her ability to recognise the murderer’s voice. As to
this aspect, the appellant relies upon the unreported
decision of this Court in Hersey (1 December 1997, No.
1996/8495/Y3) in which it was stated that the warnings
which are appropriate in identification cases apply
equally to voice recognition cases. These points are
linked to the points we have dealt with already in
relation to the identification parade and the
appellant’s vivid rainbow-coloured hair.
205. If the
trial had taken place today, a judge would be required
to give fuller warnings than were given by Gorman J. In
particular it would be necessary for there to be a
greater explanation for the reason for the warnings (see
Reid v R [1990] AC 363). But the way the question of
identification was dealt with by the judge did provide
substantial protection for James Hanratty. The summing
up appropriately stressed the importance of Valerie
Storie’s evidence. The jury was also reminded of the
evidence of Mr Skillet and Mr Trower and the matters
that might undermine their evidence. There are
references to the considerations which the jury should
take into account in assessing the reliability of the
evidence of identification, including the opportunity of
the identifying witness to observe the person
subsequently identified. There are also references to
the need for caution in approaching the identification
evidence. The judge reminded the jury that Mr Blackhall
had failed to pick out James Hanratty. As to which he
said, “All this …must go to impress on you the
carefulness, which one has to consider the
identification evidence in this case.” He also stated in
relation to Valerie Storie’s evidence that; “One has to
be very sure of an identification”.
206. As to the
appellant’s complaint about his hair (as we have already
explained) this is very much a matter which is as likely
to have been in James Hanratty’s favour, as against him,
since it would certainly make him look different from
the person who attacked Miss Storie.
207. Non-directions of the categories relied on in this
case can result in a conviction prior to the date of the
decision in Turnbull being quashed today (see Johnson
[2001] 1 Cr App 26). Whether in pre-Turnbull cases this
should be the consequence, involves not merely asking
whether there has been a breach of the Turnbull rules
but assessing the risk of the jury failing to understand
the dangers in the context of the facts of the
particular case. Here, the assessment has to be made
against the knowledge that the jury was aware that
Valerie Storie herself, and other witnesses, had either
made a mistaken identification or not identified James
Hanratty. The jury could not but have appreciated that
honest witnesses could be unreliable in relation to
identification. Furthermore, although there was no
specific warning about voice identification, the fact is
that Valerie Storie had heard her attacker speak for six
hours so she was in an excellent position to identify
him by his voice, as the jury would recognise having
heard him give evidence. They were in an excellent
position to assess whether his voice was likely to help
identification.
208. In our
judgment if the non-directions stood alone, even without
the DNA evidence, they would not justify the quashing of
the conviction.
Absence of an
Explanation of the Significance of Lies
209. Today a
judge is required when this is desirable to point out to
a jury that the fact that the defendant lied does not
mean he is guilty of the offence with which he is
charged. But here this is a technicality. The sixteenth
ground of appeal goes to the change of alibi. James
Hanratty gave his explanation for the change and the
jury was told that if the second alibi might be true he
could not be guilty. They needed no more than that. The
explanation and the second alibi were linked. We do not
consider this ground of appeal is of any substance.
Inaccurate Summary of the Evidence of
Charles France and Carole France
210. The judge’s
summing up can properly be criticised (and is in the
seventeenth ground of appeal) for not being entirely
accurate in relation to Mr France and his daughter,
Carole, but the inaccuracy only goes to whether the
appellant was in London on 21 August. The other evidence
that he was in London on that date, as he said, is
overwhelming and, in common with the views of the Court
of Criminal Appeal before whom this point (with others)
was taken, we consider that there is nothing in it.
CONCLUSION
211. We have
already stressed the importance of looking at a case
such as this in the round. The grounds of appeal are of
differing significance and although we have dealt with
them individually it is also necessary to consider them
collectively in asking ourselves the critical question
is the conviction of James Hanratty of murder unsafe
either on procedural or evidential grounds? As to the
evidential issues they all ultimately relate to the
single issue which dominated the trial and this appeal,
the identity of the killer. In our judgment for reasons
we have explained the DNA evidence establishes beyond
doubt that James Hanratty was the murderer. The DNA
evidence made what was a strong case even stronger.
Equally the strength of the evidence overall pointing to
the guilt of the appellant supports our conclusion as to
the DNA.
212. Mr Michael
Sherrard apparently opened the defence at the trial by
saying appositely that this was a case “sagging with
coincidences”. Just let us consider some of the more
striking coincidences in the light of the DNA evidence
if James Hanratty was not guilty. He was wrongly
identified by three witnesses at identification parades;
first as the person at the scene of the crime and
secondly (by two witnesses) driving a vehicle close to
where the vehicle in which the murder was committed was
found; he had the same identifying manner of speech as
the killer; he stayed in a room the night before the
crime from which bullets that had been fired from the
murder weapon were recovered; the murder weapon was
recovered from a place on a bus which he regarded as a
hiding place and the bus followed a route he could well
have used; his DNA was found on a piece of material from
Valerie Storie’s knickers where it would be expected to
be if the appellant was guilty; it was also found on the
handkerchief found with the gun. The number of alleged
coincidences means that they are not coincidences but
overwhelming proof of the safety of the conviction from
an evidential perspective.
213. As we have
seen, even by contemporary standards of the time, there
are criticisms of some substance which can be made as to
the procedural defects, but these criticisms have to be
seen in the context of the case as a whole. On the
appeal we focus on what are alleged to have been defects
in the trial process. This is particularly true in
relation to non-disclosure. However, when we consider
whether this was a flawed trial we have to consider the
sum total of the defects against the backcloth of what
was undoubtedly a thorough exploration of the real
issue, namely was James Hanratty the killer and on that
issue the jury came to the right answer. In making this
comment we are not ignoring the two different grounds
for saying a conviction is unsafe. We are recognising
those two grounds but also acknowledging that the
purpose of the rules is to ensure that an individual is
not wrongly convicted and in the case of the procedural
errors in this case this involves taking into account
whether they interfered with the ability of James
Hanratty to defend himself by raising a doubt as to his
guilt. In that context we are satisfied the procedural
shortcomings fell far short of what is required to lead
to the conclusion that the trial should be regarded as
flawed and this conviction unsafe on procedural grounds.
The trial still met the basic standards of fairness
required. We are satisfied that James Hanratty suffered
no real prejudice.
214. The appeal
must therefore be dismissed. However before we end this
judgment it is right we should mention the Hanratty
family and their supporters. Throughout the appeal we
have observed that they have attended in significant
numbers and followed the proceedings behaving
impeccably. Although their cause, to establish the
innocence of James Hanratty has failed, we consider they
deserve commendation for the extraordinary loyalty and
commitment they have shown to what they thought was a
just cause, to right an injustice. They have also been
remarkably well served by the lawyers who acted on their
behalf.